"I need a New PC!" 2011 Thread of reading the OP. Seriously. [Part 2]

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chaosblade said:
That first one is a case.

That Antec PSU is okay, but it really depends on how important a modular PSU is to you. For the cases you're looking at it will really be beneficial. The only problem is that it uses three +12v rails, so you'll have to make sure you balance the load properly. It supports 37 amps across all three rails at the same time , you can get other PSUs in that price range that provide more, but they won't be modular.

Whoops! I meant this one:

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B001EZMEZO/?tag=neogaf0e-20

500 or 600; noticed they have a decent rebate going.
 
n0n44m said:
no you need to assume it only does 2.0 (in games) unless it says Dolby Digital Live or DTS Connect, here's why:

optical output can only do 2.0 uncompressed and does 5.1 by compressing it in DD or DTS (HDMI doesn't have this issue and does up to 7.1 uncompressed)

Movies have the 5.1 encoded on the disk, sitting there waiting to be sent to your receiver through the optical output. Games are "live audio" however, and thus need to be compressed in DD or DTS format on-the-fly. For that some extra codec (DD Live/DTS Connect) is needed, and DD and DTS require $$ royalties $$ from manufacturers to implement this. Sony and Microsoft paid those for the PS3/360, most computer hardware manufacturers don't for earlier mentioned reasons.

Can anyone recommend a good, cheap sound card that does DD Live/DTS Connect then?
 
chaosblade said:
Have you tried updating in safe mode with networking? Could be something you installed or ran, I had issues with Win7 SP1 because of something Driver Sweeper screwed up.

Windows update won't run in safe mode. Is there a way to install the updates without using windows update? That's probably a dumb question, but...
 
kinn said:
Can anyone recommend a good, cheap sound card that does DD Live/DTS Connect then?

I used this one before going HDMI

edit : looking around most other manufacturers only offer DD Live/DTS Connect on their more expensive cards :( Creative apparently offers the DD Live as some sort of paid driver upgrade for some cards, haven't tested it though
 
A question about this netbook: http://www.netbooklive.com/asus-eee-pc-1215b-review-8726/

It comes with 4GB of RAM but runs Windows 7 32-bit. Does that mean that some of the RAM is actually unused? The review says that part of it is actually shared with the graphics chip, which makes sense I suppose, but still, am I not wasting some of my RAM if I stick to a 32-bit OS?

Assuming the answer is "yes", does the 64-bit version require more hardware resources? Also, can I do a fresh install of an OS via a USB DVD-drive, or do I need an internal drive?

I'm basically debating whether to buy Windows 7 64-bit (this thing is not cheap) or not because otherwise I'm stuck with XP/7 32-bit on all my computers. One more thing: which edition should I buy? I'm not gonna do heavy use of all of Windows's functions, but I don't want a version that might at some point keep from performing an important modification in the future (whatever that might be).

Ultimate noobish question: what are the benefits/drawbacks of 64-bit over 32-bit (apart from maximum usable RAM)?
 
Ok, my turn to build a gaming rig!

This is my current plan:

Motherboard:
ASUS P8Z68-V PRO Z68 S-1155 ATX

GFX card:
ASUS RADEON HD6950 2GB DCII GDDR5

CPU cooler:
COOLIT ECO ALC LIQUID

RAM:
CORSAIR 8GB DDR3 XMS3 VENGEANCE

PSU:
CORSAIR AX 750W PROFESSIONAL SERIES MODULAR or
CORSAIR TX 650W V2 ATX12V 2.3 / EPS12V PSU

SSD:
CORSAIR FORCE SERIES 3 2.5" 60GB SSD

Harddisk:
SAMSUNG SPINPOINT F3 1TB SATA/300 7200RPM

Tower:
FRACTAL DESIGN MIDITOWER DEFINE R3 BLACK

CPU:
INTEL CORE I5 2500K 3.30GHZ 6MB S-1155

DVD stuff:
SAMSUNG DVD±R/RW/RAM DL 22X IDE


I'm not sure about what PSU I should get, as the 650W is half price of the 750W. I want to run games like BF3 and Skyrim and good settings, and think of installing only the OS on the SSD, while the rest go on the TB harddisk. Also, any bad stuff here that should be changed with something better, or just a case of overkill compared to other components?
 
Kilrogg said:
A question about this netbook: http://www.netbooklive.com/asus-eee-pc-1215b-review-8726/

It comes with 4GB of RAM but runs Windows 7 32-bit. Does that mean that some of the RAM is actually unused? The review says that part of it is actually shared with the graphics chip, which makes sense I suppose, but still, am I not wasting some of my RAM if I stick to a 32-bit OS?

Assuming the answer is "yes", does the 64-bit version require more hardware resources? Also, can I do a fresh install of an OS via a USB DVD-drive, or do I need an internal drive?

I'm basically debating whether to buy Windows 7 64-bit (this thing is not cheap) or not because otherwise I'm stuck with XP/7 32-bit on all my computers. One more thing: which edition should I buy? I'm not gonna do heavy use of all of Windows's functions, but I don't want a version that might at some point keep from performing an important modification in the future (whatever that might be).

Ultimate noobish question: what are the benefits/drawbacks of 64-bit over 32-bit (apart from maximum usable RAM)?
I have 32 bit with 4 gbs of ram, heres my usage
b3oAl.jpg

You do get most of it but still having all of it usable would be nice. As for reinstalling, any external dvd drive should work, don't think it really matters. You can even create a windows install usb flash drive as well. 64 bit allows 64 bit cpu's run code and programs faster and more efficiently(correct me if im wrong guys lol). But honestly, if you are stuck with 32 bit, you'll still be fine
 
Kilrogg said:
A question about this netbook: http://www.netbooklive.com/asus-eee-pc-1215b-review-8726/

It comes with 4GB of RAM but runs Windows 7 32-bit. Does that mean that some of the RAM is actually unused? The review says that part of it is actually shared with the graphics chip, which makes sense I suppose, but still, am I not wasting some of my RAM if I stick to a 32-bit OS?

Assuming the answer is "yes", does the 64-bit version require more hardware resources? Also, can I do a fresh install of an OS via a USB DVD-drive, or do I need an internal drive?

I'm basically debating whether to buy Windows 7 64-bit (this thing is not cheap) or not because otherwise I'm stuck with XP/7 32-bit on all my computers. One more thing: which edition should I buy? I'm not gonna do heavy use of all of Windows's functions, but I don't want a version that might at some point keep from performing an important modification in the future (whatever that might be).

Ultimate noobish question: what are the benefits/drawbacks of 64-bit over 32-bit (apart from maximum usable RAM)?

64-bit files are a little bigger, and sometimes requirements will be a little higher (I think they are for Windows, not sure about other software). Software that takes advantage of 64-bit will be faster, file compression is one example where there are noticeable benefits. Most applications won't see much difference in the end though.

Most of the differences aren't going to be apparent to the user though, but the 64-bit architecture is a lot cleaner than x86 32 bit and by transitioning to 64-bit, you are helping move the development side forward. Windows 8 really shouldn't be publicly available in 32-bit form, but Microsoft probably won't feel confident enough to only release the 64-bit OS yet.

And Home Premium is fine, there aren't many benefits of getting Professional, unlike XP. The biggest is "XP mode," but that's intended for businesses running old and poorly written software that isn't compatible with Win7 even using it's compatibility settings.

For a netbook, I'd say you're fine with 32 bit since you're going to want all the available resources you can get, and that little difference spent on the 64 bit OS could make a difference.

Hellcrow said:
Ok, my turn to build a gaming rig!

This is my current plan:

---

I'm not sure about what PSU I should get, as the 650W is half price of the 750W. I want to run games like BF3 and Skyrim and good settings, and think of installing only the OS on the SSD, while the rest go on the TB harddisk. Also, any bad stuff here that should be changed with something better, or just a case of overkill compared to other components?
Not sure I'd go with that cooler, you could get an air cooler for a similar price and it would probably perform better.

That one is very similar to my H50, and from my experience the H50 in push/pull + Athlon II x3 @ 3.5GHz ran hotter than my Tuniq Tower 120 Extreme + Phenom II 955 @ 3.5GHz.

And the 650W PSU is fine. The other one is from a higher end product line and is modular, which is the reason for the price difference.
 
another question. I've got the Fractal R3 case. If I were to add two more fans - partly to help GPU cooling, where should I put them?
 
Chinner said:
another question. I've got the Fractal R3 case. If I were to add two more fans - partly to help GPU cooling, where should I put them?
What are your options? Looks like front, side panel, and maybe bottom?

One bottom intake fan will help the most with the GPU, looks like you have a spot for one of those. That should push the air straight up to the GPU.

Then either front or side intake, probably a toss up. Front fan will kind of throw the air at the GPU and CPU, while the side fan position will blow the air over the top of the GPU and by the CPU.
 
Mr Nightman said:
I have 32 bit with 4 gbs of ram, heres my usage

pic

You do get most of it but still having all of it usable would be nice. As for reinstalling, any external dvd drive should work, don't think it really matters. You can even create a windows install usb flash drive as well. 64 bit allows 64 bit cpu's run code and programs faster and more efficiently(correct me if im wrong guys lol). But honestly, if you are stuck with 32 bit, you'll still be fine

Thanks.

chaosblade said:
64-bit files are a little bigger, and sometimes requirements will be a little higher (I think they are for Windows, not sure about other software). Software that takes advantage of 64-bit will be faster, file compression is one example where there are noticeable benefits. Most applications won't see much difference in the end though.

Most of the differences aren't going to be apparent to the user though, but the 64-bit architecture is a lot cleaner than x86 32 bit and by transitioning to 64-bit, you are helping move the development side forward. Windows 8 really shouldn't be publicly available in 32-bit form, but Microsoft probably won't feel confident enough to only release the 64-bit OS yet.

And Home Premium is fine, there aren't many benefits of getting Professional, unlike XP. The biggest is "XP mode," but that's intended for businesses running old and poorly written software that isn't compatible with Win7 even using it's compatibility settings.

For a netbook, I'd say you're fine with 32 bit since you're going to want all the available resources you can get, and that little difference spent on the 64 bit OS could make a difference.

Thanks a lot. There's another netbook I'm interested in that has a 1.6GHz dual core AMD E-350 processor with 7 Home Premium 64 bits, a Radeon 6310, a 7200rpm HDD and 2GB of DDR3 RAM that I can easily swap for 8gigs of ram for 50€ (just because I can, RAM is so cheap). Do you still think this computer would be slow enough that a 32-bit version of Windows would allow for a significant gain in performance, or am I good to go with 64-bit + 8gigs?

About WiFi: is there any point in choosing an a/b/g/n module over a b/g/n module? The former only costs 13€ more, but if there's really no use for WiFi a I don't want to waste any money.
 
Kilrogg said:
Thanks.



Thanks a lot. There's another netbook I'm interested in that has a 1.6GHz dual core AMD E-350 processor with 7 Home Premium 64 bits, a Radeon 6310, a 7200rpm HDD and 2GB of DDR3 RAM that I can easily swap for 8gigs of ram for 50€ (just because I can, RAM is so cheap). Do you still think this computer would be slow enough that a 32-bit version of Windows would allow for a significant gain in performance, or am I good to go with 64-bit + 8gigs?

About WiFi: is there any point in choosing an a/b/g/n module over a b/g/n module? The former only costs 13€ more, but if there's really no use for WiFi a I don't want to waste any money.
Unless you know you need the old a standard, you're fine with b/g/n. I don't know of anything that still uses a, it's legacy by this point.

And I think I'd trust whatever the manufacturer puts on the system. If they put a 64-bit OS on it, they are probably confident you won't see any issues.
 
chaosblade said:
Unless you know you need the old a standard, you're fine with b/g/n. I don't know of anything that still uses a, it's legacy by this point.

And I think I'd trust whatever the manufacturer puts on the system. If they put a 64-bit OS on it, they are probably confident you won't see any issues.

Thank you again. This Lenovo X121e netbook is so close to being my dream netbook: matte screen, trackpoint (sweaty palms on a touchpad is a no-no), 64-bit and a 7200rpm HDD (and everything is swappable).

The 2 drawbacks are no USB 3.0 and a power brick that's bigger and less elegant than ASUS powerbricks. If it had those it'd have all I can realistically want on a netbook. I can get over those if it means I get a good HDD, a matte screen and can use all the RAM I want.
 
chaosblade said:
What are your options? Looks like front, side panel, and maybe bottom?

One bottom intake fan will help the most with the GPU, looks like you have a spot for one of those. That should push the air straight up to the GPU.

Then either front or side intake, probably a toss up. Front fan will kind of throw the air at the GPU and CPU, while the side fan position will blow the air over the top of the GPU and by the CPU.
well fans go in the front/side/bottom and top, although you'd make the top fan expel air. Putting a fan on the bottom and front make sense, ta.
 
does anyone here have an opinion on CyberPower for buying a computer? i just don't think i can build my own computer (handicapped). i saw someone else on here said they were buying from them. i just want to know if they are trustworthy enough before buying a computer from them.
 
Think I'm caught in an upgrade spiral...
As I wrote earlier I have just upgraded to W7 64 Home Premium and a new gfx-card, Gigabyte Nvidia GTX460 1 gb.
I see that RAM is quite cheap. Will I gain anything by upgrading my 4gb to 8?
I have a Intel Core2Duo E 7500 2.93GHZ processor on a Asus P5Q Pro motherboard with 2x2 gb of Kingston ValueRam DDR 2 PC6400 CL5.

If I buy more memory, should I get the same brand, or is there something better?
 
I'm getting ready to install my new SSD. I've enabled AHCI on my mobo, it just appears that my SSD is connected to the same slave channel as my 500gb mechanical drive. Does this matter or should I move the SSD over to another port/channel?
 
dangerbyrnes said:
does anyone here have an opinion on CyberPower for buying a computer? i just don't think i can build my own computer (handicapped). i saw someone else on here said they were buying from them. i just want to know if they are trustworthy enough before buying a computer from them.
I built my own as well(have muscular dystrophy), but walked my dad through the steps I couldn't do, and it worked great. Was both our first times too :-)

Have you considered ncix.com? You pick out the components and pay them 50 bucks to assemble before shipping to you. They are based in canada, not sure if they ship to the us, anyone care to confirm this?
 
mikespit1200 said:
I'm getting ready to install my new SSD. I've enabled AHCI on my mobo, it just appears that my SSD is connected to the same slave channel as my 500gb mechanical drive. Does this matter or should I move the SSD over to another port/channel?
There is no master or slave with Sata ports. All ports have their own bandwidth. If you have 6GB/s SSD, run it on 6GB port otherwise any port will do.
 
Mr Nightman said:
I built my own as well(have muscular dystrophy), but walked my dad through the steps I couldn't do, and it worked great. Was both our first times too :-)

Have you considered ncix.com? You pick out the components and pay them 50 bucks to assemble before shipping to you. They are based in canada, not sure if they ship to the us, anyone care to confirm this?


huh, i have the same thing (duchenne's to be exact).

anyway, that site seems to do the same thing as CyberPower, but after quickly putting in what im looking to get ncix looks more expensive (yes i did account for currency difference).

also thanks for replying.
 
dangerbyrnes said:
does anyone here have an opinion on CyberPower for buying a computer? i just don't think i can build my own computer (handicapped). i saw someone else on here said they were buying from them. i just want to know if they are trustworthy enough before buying a computer from them.

Mr Nightman said:
I built my own as well(have muscular dystrophy), but walked my dad through the steps I couldn't do, and it worked great. Was both our first times too :-)

Have you considered ncix.com? You pick out the components and pay them 50 bucks to assemble before shipping to you. They are based in canada, not sure if they ship to the us, anyone care to confirm this?
NCIX is a better option than CyberPower. Particularly because they are cheaper, but I've also heard about some bad experiences with CyberPower.

Edit: Odd that NCIX would cost more, I've always seen CP builds that had 100-$200 in markup.

NCIX does have a US branch, but last I heard they offered pretty limited options for components. They might have expanded some since though.
 
dangerbyrnes said:
huh, i have the same thing (duchenne's to be exact).

anyway, that site seems to do the same thing as CyberPower, but after quickly putting in what im looking to get ncix looks more expensive (yes i did account for currency difference).

also thanks for replying.
crazy I have duchennes as well, not a problem, always nice to have different options, but if cybers cheaper may as well go with them, not sure how they are, should be just fine though
 
chaosblade said:
NCIX is a better option than CyberPower. Particularly because they are cheaper, but I've also heard about some bad experiences with CyberPower.

Edit: Odd that NCIX would cost more, I've always seen CP builds that had 100-$200 in markup.

NCIX does have a US branch, but last I heard they offered pretty limited options for components. They might have expanded some since though.

yeah, i tried there us site. it's either down or doesn't exist anymore =/

does the Canadian branch ship to the U.S?

EDIT: just went through it again, pretty much the same price. major difference though: the cyber power build has a gtx 590, the ncix build has a gtx 580. (gtx 590 isn't even an option on ncix)

ncix: $1618 CAD
cyber power: $1635 CAD (converted)

(yes, my price range has changed considerably)
 
Sooo I bought a mobo from Newegg, installed it and it didn't boot. I had a suspicion the mobo was bad, so I bought the same one from Frys. It booted.

I returned the mobo to Newegg and they said the CPU pins were bent and couldn't be repaired, so they're sending it back to me.

What are my options now?
 
Rookje said:
Sooo I bought a mobo from Newegg, installed it and it didn't boot. I had a suspicion the mobo was bad, so I bought the same one from Frys. It booted.

I returned the mobo to Newegg and they said the CPU pins were bent and couldn't be repaired, so they're sending it back to me.

What are my options now?

You can RMA through the MOBO manufacturer, I believe.
 
Rookje said:
Sooo I bought a mobo from Newegg, installed it and it didn't boot. I had a suspicion the mobo was bad, so I bought the same one from Frys. It booted.

I returned the mobo to Newegg and they said the CPU pins were bent and couldn't be repaired, so they're sending it back to me.

What are my options now?
Obviously you return the Newegg mobo to Frys ;D

But seriously, don't do that. Send it back to the manufacturer and they should repair it or send you another one as long as it's under warranty. Then you can hopefully return one of them.
 
Chinner said:
another question. I've got the Fractal R3 case. If I were to add two more fans - partly to help GPU cooling, where should I put them?
Chinner said:
okay now i have a question:

I have a R3 and I want to throw in a third fan, where would be the best place to place it?
·feist· said:
Second front intake. Depending on your choice of components, you can also try floor intake mount, or front roof intake mount.
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?p=29820214#post29820214
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?p=29820295#post29820295


Benedict said:
Think I'm caught in an upgrade spiral...
As I wrote earlier I have just upgraded to W7 64 Home Premium and a new gfx-card, Gigabyte Nvidia GTX460 1 gb.
I see that RAM is quite cheap. Will I gain anything by upgrading my 4gb to 8?
I have a Intel Core2Duo E 7500 2.93GHZ processor on a Asus P5Q Pro motherboard with 2x2 gb of Kingston ValueRam DDR 2 PC6400 CL5.

If I buy more memory, should I get the same brand, or is there something better?
Memory won't be a cost-effective upgrade for you, particularly with DDR2 being pricier than DDR3. Your CPU is holding you back far more than your RAM.

Since you have a good OC'ing motherboard, try getting up to 3.8-4.2GHz.


darkblade77 said:
I found that Silverstone has a carrying bag for some of their SFF cases, and that it can fit some things past the recommended maximum dimensions for it.

I had trouble finding anything that was on the small-but-not-ITX side that would reasonably fit the thing(it's possible the Grandia cases might fit, but I'm not really sure) until I ran into Thermaltake's Lanbox Lite

As far as I can tell, this seems like a good case and the price is pretty modest; about what I would pay for the GD05. Is there something I'm missing about it, and am I better off just searching for traditional duffel bags with inside straps to secure one of the larger cases you listed?

I also noticed that the window-less version seems to cost more, which is odd. I think the windowless version appears to have better ventilation, which would be better for the 470 with the cooler replaced--I think.

I wanted to avoid the NZXT Vulcan just on looks--I don't really want a case that attracts too much attention--but it may just be the bang for the buck I need since the complications above seem to be twice as expensive as just picking it up instead and using a typical backpack to store the other essential components.


EDIT: Are either of these two PSUs allright to use in place of the Raidmax?

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B000PLY5BE/?tag=neogaf0e-20

http://www.amazon.com/dp/B0017KE3DM/?tag=neogaf0e-20 (listed to me before, so I assume it's good)
I've yet to come across a recent Thermaltake case that wasn't bettered by other brands at its price level. YMMV. The Level 10 GT has to be one of their best. Even then, at $250-280 worth of plastic and steel, there are numerous cases that match, or beat it, while costing less.

Assuming the build quality holds up, and the handle can sufficiently support a reasonable amount of weight, the Vulcan looks like it should be near the top of your list. Most decent bags, and carryalls should have some type of securing strap. Did you search for "lan bags?"
 
What's the difference between the S and VS versions of motherboard ASROCK H61M? I assume it isn't anything important, but I want to be sure...
 
saw this over at slickdeals and I'm pretty tempted

Coolermaster HAF 912 case with 500W PSU for $45 (after 2 $10 rebates)
The rebates dont exactly excite me, but it does seem like a pretty decent deal... I'm just not sure I'm ready to pull the trigger. In general I hear its better to wait and get all the components of your build at the same time. Is that what you guys would recommend, or has anyone here had luck buying a lot of their parts individually when they're on sale?

Also while I'm hear, another question I had was in regard to wi-fi... How do you get this? What I mean is what component of the computer typically would have this? My guess is either the mobo, or that you have to get some additional card for it. If that's the case I'm surprised by how many builds I see that don't have it included. Are a lot of you guys still using ethernet cables?
 
pedr0theli0n said:
saw this over at slickdeals and I'm pretty tempted

Coolermaster HAF 912 case with 500W PSU for $45 (after 2 $10 rebates)
The rebates dont exactly excite me, but it does seem like a pretty decent deal... I'm just not sure I'm ready to pull the trigger.
PSU is kind of weak. 30A on two rails, and it's not very efficient (higher electricity bill). Really cheap though, could run most single card systems. Only has one PCIe cable though.

In general I hear its better to wait and get all the components of your build at the same time. Is that what you guys would recommend, or has anyone here had luck buying a lot of their parts individually when they're on sale?
It depends, I helped a friend (schmattakopf on this forum) pick out his parts and he got them over a period of a couple months, ended up with what would have been a $1000 build or so for under $800, IIRC.

There are issues. If you don't know what's coming up, you could buy a part on sale, but then a little while later new hardware comes out and the price drops. So you could have either gotten something better or possibly paid less by waiting. You also have to factor returns in. Lot of places (like Newegg) have a 30 day policy, and if you build your PC over a few months and have an issue when putting it together, you might be SOL if something doesn't work.

Also while I'm hear, another question I had was in regard to wi-fi... How do you get this? What I mean is what component of the computer typically would have this? My guess is either the mobo, or that you have to get some additional card for it. If that's the case I'm surprised by how many builds I see that don't have it included. Are a lot of you guys still using ethernet cables?
Some high end motherboards have it, but yeah, usually you buy a card. Most people building PCs for gaming will still use ethernet because it's more reliable.
 
So yeah...I think I'm fucked.

It started to thunder/lightning pretty bad near me so I was getting ready to shut down the computer when all of a sudden both the computer and monitor shut off. Now my monitor won't even turn on (no lights nothing) and my computer turns on for five seconds, then turns off, turns on for three seconds, turns off, then turns on and off and on and off repeatedly. Anyone have any clue what I might need to look at to fix this? Am I completely boned?

I would like to think it has something to do with my rooms power atm though. When I put my phone in there to charge and test out the power it would flicker between charging and not charging, so I thought there might not be enough power for these two things to run. The refrigerator in the other room still isn't on yet either. Yet my speakers, dac, ps3 and tv (though the latter two are on different outlets) still work. I tried my PC on the other outlets and the same result, which, sadly, leads me to think there's something wrong with the PC.
 
Alucrid said:
So yeah...I think I'm fucked.

It started to thunder/lightning pretty bad near me so I was getting ready to shut down the computer when all of a sudden both the computer and monitor shut off. Now my monitor won't even turn on (no lights nothing) and my computer turns on for five seconds, then turns off, turns on for three seconds, turns off, then turns on and off and on and off repeatedly. Anyone have any clue what I might need to look at to fix this? Am I completely boned?
Try moving it somewhere else and see if you get the same results. Did you have it plugged into a surge protector or UPS? If so you should be able to get reimbursed if they fried.

If you have a quality PSU, it should take the blow if you get a power surge without damaging your other components. So assuming something is messed up, you might only have to replace that.

Edit: Yeah, looks like your power isn't stable. I'd say unplug anything that could be damaged (PCs, TVs, consoles, etc) and wait until things settle down.
 
gibon3z said:
So not happy with my Gpu right now.

Idles at 47-52 c. Under load its at 78c.

Will probably need to RMA hopefully the process is not long.
What GPU do you have? If it's a high end one those aren't bad temps.
 
Alucrid said:
So yeah...I think I'm fucked.

It started to thunder/lightning pretty bad near me so I was getting ready to shut down the computer when all of a sudden both the computer and monitor shut off. Now my monitor won't even turn on (no lights nothing) and my computer turns on for five seconds, then turns off, turns on for three seconds, turns off, then turns on and off and on and off repeatedly. Anyone have any clue what I might need to look at to fix this? Am I completely boned?

oh shit... that doesn't sound good at all. you don't keep your computer on a surge protector?

i had a flat panel TV just shut off, never to turn back on again due to a power surge. (i swear by surge protectors now) if you are lucky it might have just fried your power supply on the computer. your monitor might be dead too.



EDIT: oh, ok. you should probably check your circuit breaker to see if one of the boxes have overloaded. the pc not working in the other outlet is probably not good.
 
I've ordered a gaming PC off ibuypower after my own broke recently. Any of you guys have thoughts on the company? It seems like a good deal for someone who cant build their PC but knows what parts they want. Or am I just going to get horribly screwed over somehow
 
Noob question, but from following a few PSU calculators online, I figured that a 400W PSU is good enough if I go for a GTX 560 Ti. What if I go for the MSI Twin Frozr II version, will I need to get something with a little more power, or can I just assume it drains the same amount of power as any other regular 560 Ti?
 
·feist· said:
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?p=29820214#post29820214
http://www.neogaf.com/forum/showthread.php?p=29820295#post29820295
I've yet to come across a recent Thermaltake case that wasn't bettered by other brands at its price level. YMMV. The Level 10 GT has to be one of their best. Even then, at $250-280 worth of plastic and steel, there are numerous cases that match, or beat it, while costing less.

Assuming the build quality holds up, and the handle can sufficiently support a reasonable amount of weight, the Vulcan looks like it should be near the top of your list. Most decent bags, and carryalls should have some type of securing strap. Did you search for "lan bags?"

Okay, good to know.

Searching for "lan bags" got me a lot of hybrid carrying harnesses; I wasn't expecting that at first, so I kept glazing over them looking for something more akin to a duffel bag. I guess I had some misgivings about the partial exposure versus them being fully encased in some sort of lined bag, but they definitely beat/forego the need for a case handle if they're as secure as implied.
 
gibon3z said:
So not happy with my Gpu right now.

Idles at 47-52 c. Under load its at 78c.

Will probably need to RMA hopefully the process is not long.

If you're RMAing it for a replacement instead of a different model, I wouldn't say for sure that you'll get better temps. Usually if there's something wrong with the way the heatsink's attached, you'd be getting worse temperatures, and probably crashes. If the 78C is on a high-end game, that's not really that bad. Most likely, it could be cooler with a higher fan speed, but the auto profile isn't ramping it up higher because it's geared more for quietness and 78C isn't a problem for a GPU to handle.

If you are concerned about the temps though, before you give it back, try using MSI Afterburner and setting a custom fan curve. You can make the fan RPM ramp up sooner and thus cool the card more, though it'll be noisier.
 
gibon3z said:
MSI twin forzr II 6950.
That sounds about right then. A reference 6950 will hit almost 90C during an OCCT or Furmark test. As mentioned above, you can play with the fan speeds in Afterburner and set that to your liking, but it's probably going to be louder.
 
TurbulentTurtle said:
Noob question, but from following a few PSU calculators online, I figured that a 400W PSU is good enough if I go for a GTX 560 Ti. What if I go for the MSI Twin Frozr II version, will I need to get something with a little more power, or can I just assume it drains the same amount of power as any other regular 560 Ti?
More since they are overclocked while the reference 560Ti isn't. I'd say a good (single rail) 450Watt must be enough.
 
kinn said:
Can anyone recommend a good, cheap sound card that does DD Live/DTS Connect then?

my personal experience with surround sound has been to ignore ("go to blazes") all the proprietary standards. that's after setting up an "approved" or whatever 7.1 channel system. ultimately decided on a good 4.1 setup. that's two sets of two speakers (front/rear) and a subwoofer.

spatial constraints factored in heavily here and might not apply to you personally, but in my experience the additional channels are a waste without a much larger volume of space to fill with sound. I'd say you need at least ~3 feet of space between your front and center channels for them to even begin to add something to the experience.

all IMO
 
mlarine said:
Get some faster RAM. RAM speed generally doesn't mean much, but 1066 is as slow as it gets for DDR3. At least get 1333, that will rarely bottleneck you. 1600 never should outside of a few benchmark programs. 1333 RAM should be like $2 more or something.

Case isn't very good for the price, doesn't really offer any modern features and airflow on newer cases will probably be a step above that one. Check out the cases in the OP, particularly the HAF 912 and Shinobi since those seem to be where your price range is.

Looks fine other than that.
 
dangerbyrnes said:
oh shit... that doesn't sound good at all. you don't keep your computer on a surge protector?

i had a flat panel TV just shut off, never to turn back on again due to a power surge. (i swear by surge protectors now) if you are lucky it might have just fried your power supply on the computer. your monitor might be dead too.



EDIT: oh, ok. you should probably check your circuit breaker to see if one of the boxes have overloaded. the pc not working in the other outlet is probably not good.

I do. Good new everyone, THEY LIVE. I think it had something to the buildings power, not my own devices. Like, five minutes ago the monitor popped on, tried out my computer and it was golden, except that it was trying to boot from a floppy, so a quick bios change and bam. I'm back. Thank god...
 
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