Balls. I wish I'd known that sooner. Even with my 560 Ti back at eBuyer, I doubt it'll take them long to find it faulty, so I fully expect my replacement to be one of the older ones.Terproerg said:The 448 core 560ti is comming out at the end this month. Makes me mad cause i just bought a 560 ti a week ago. Info here. Seems like the power isnt going to be much higher either. Considering it should be a decent performance boost.
A gimped/cut 570. If it was just underclocked people would buy them and clock them to a 570.Gvaz said:So that 560ti 448 is basically an underclocked 570? For cheaper? WELP
chaosblade said:I don't really get how the pricing is going to work, it shouldn't be far off from the 570 performance-wise, but it's going to cost almost $100 less? Or are we going to see some price adjustments across the board with the introduction of this card?
Gvaz said:So that 560ti 448 is basically an underclocked 570? For cheaper? WELP
This is almost identical to my build, outside of a few minor things (HDD, PSU, Case).jstevenson said:Alright, here's what I'm thinking, probably going to hold off to Cyber Monday just to see if anything else is on sale.
Gaming and maybe some emulation at 1920x1080.
CPU:Intel i5 2500k
GPU:EVGA 570GTX (I looked at the 560GTX Ti Hawk from MSI... it was about 50 bucks cheaper, which seems like it's worth spending the 50 bucks to jump to the 570gtx, thoughts? Only thing I'm still conflicted on)
Mobo: ASUS P8Z68-V
Ram: G.SKILL Sniper 8GB (2 x 4GB)
PSU: Antec BP550 Plus 550W ATX12V
HDD: Samsung F3 1TB (hard drive prices make me cry)
SSD: Crucial 64GB m4
Sound: Xonar DG
Case: NZXT Technologies H2
CPU heatsink/fan: Cooler Master Hyper 212+
OS: Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit
Probably will grab some sort of bluetooth keyboard/mouse + X360 wireless PC controller.
Before you know it, you're going to have a test bench and two PC's worth of spare parts.TheExodu5 said:Well, just bought a CX600 as a backup PSU. My AX850 may be dying so this may help me determine that (though I'll only be running a single GTX 570 in the meantime). I figured it was a cheap enough PSU and it can't hurt to have a spare.
This is in response to my PC rebooting randomly.
mkenyon said:Before you know it, you're going to have a test bench and two PC's worth of spare parts.
Sorry you're having issues though.
This a launch P67 or a revision board with the fixed sata ports? Try putting a single HDD and DVD drive on your SATA 6 ports.Mobius1B7R said:I'm having a really weird issue with my computer. I shut it down last night and when I went to boot it this morning, it wouldn't boot. It gets to the windows splash screen and then I get the prompt asking me what to do because it won't boot. I ran the repair tool and that couldn't fix the issue. I have tried wiping the hard drives and starting from scratch, but I can't even do that because the system won't boot off the DVD drive. What do you guys think the issue would be? I've tried booting with just the SSD, with just the HDD to install windows on there, but neither worked.
My system is
i5 2500k
6950HD
120GB Vertex 2 SSD
1TB HDD
8 GB Ram
Gigabyte P67A-UD3P
Sounds like a short to me.TheExodu5 said:Yeah...most annoying issue ever. My PC will reboot randomly. There's no rhyme or reason to it...doesn't matter if my PC is sitting idle or I'm running stress tests. Sometimes it will work for 24-48 hours straight. Other times I can't have it on for more than 30 minutes at a time. Usually, when it reboots, it will go through a constant stream of 15-20 reboots before finally turning on again (which makes me think it's an overheating issue), but sometimes it will boot up again without any issues. Makes no sense.
mkenyon said:Sounds like a short to me.
mkenyon said:This a launch P67 or a revision board with the fixed sata ports? Try putting a single HDD and DVD drive on your SATA 6 ports.
Sounds like a short to me.
Yeah, this is a known issue, huge recall for this particular reason. Your SATA6 ports will be unaffected though.Mobius1B7R said:Launch board.
Not necessarily. They can cause all sorts of strange issues.TheExodu5 said:A short would just stop be from booting up, wouldn't it?
mkenyon said:Yeah, this is a known issue, huge recall for this particular reason. Your SATA6 ports will be unaffected though.
Not necessarily. They can cause all sorts of strange issues.
mkenyon said:But smokey, you spent $1200 on video cards alone. Surely a new ~$250 case isn't out of the question. Some of the favorites over at overclock.net:
The likelihood of all your HDD's and DVD drive failing at the same time is pretty astronomical. I'd bet on the SATA controller. Contact the manufacturer to get an RMA going. Since this is part of the recall, they'll send one out to you right away, without you needing to send in yours first.Mobius1B7R said:I've tried booting with just the SATA6 ports, but my DvD drive doesn't work and I still cannot boot into windows. Chkdsk finds no errors either. Think these drives might have died as well or do I need to get a new DVD drive and see if it works?
Smokey said:Tis true. And I love em to death. However there are other things that are more important than a case right now to me. First priority is trying to decide what I want to do with my monitor situation. I originally wanted 3 3D monitors, but looking at it space will be an issue. I've shifted my focus to a 27''-30'' 2560 x _____ screen.
Right now I run them close to their stock clock (832mhz). Under utilizing them considering I have 2 580 Lightnings, but they are still 2 580s regardless if they're running at 850mhz or 930mhz.
I need to get a new monitor setup so that they can really stretch their legs.
Maybe I missed your post, but could you give a brief summary of what you got?Azure Phoenix said:Just a quick question, I've got all the major parts for my PC and want to build it next week, are there any commonly forgotten small parts (cables etc.) that I may need to order? I'd rather not get halfway through and then find I need to wait 3-4 days for one tiny part to arrive.
Also do optical drives usually come with the required cables, or is that with the motherboard or something? The one I picked up came with nothing extra.
BlazingDarkness said:Hey GAF, ordered a PC last night, and was just wondering what I can expect in terms of performance? The purchase was pretty much a juggling act between value and (hopefully) good performance, hoping to be able to play all of the modern titles (not necessarily on ultra setting or anything)
Specs;
CPU: Intel Core i5 2500K @ 4.3Ghz
CPU Cooler: Thermaltake Frio
Motherboard: Gigabyte Z68AP-D3
Memory: 4.0GB Corsair DDR3 1600mhz XMS3 (2x 2GB)
Hard Drives: 1TB S-ATAII 3.0Gb/s
Optical Drive: 22x DVD±RW DL S-ATA
Graphics card: ATI Radeon HD 6850 1GB
PSU: 500W Xigmate
Purchased via the DinoPC website
The last PC I bought was in like 2003 or something, so I'm far from educated in the field
Ah, yeah I didn't post it since I've had to find a lot of this out by myself. These are all the parts I've bought so far:mkenyon said:Maybe I missed your post, but could you give a brief summary of what you got?
Motherboards generally come with 2-3 SATA cables (used for HDDs and optical drives). Cases come with all the screws necessary. Only thing that folks need sometimes are extension cables for the PSU. Some PSU's have somewhat short cables, and depending on the case, may not reach where they need to go.
BigBlackGamer said:You should get a 120hz monitor and call it a day. The new samsung SA line is pretty awesome.
mkenyon said:The TFII might have temp issues in the FT-03. The 90 degree mounted motherboards are designed for reference coolers only. Blower style coolers like the TFII don't work properly in them.
Other than that, your build looks good!
Piercedveil said:I was considering upgrading within the next month or two, but I think there's a couple problems.
1.) I must use wireless internet for my desktop, as sad as that is. I'm assuming I will need to buy a wireless card, since I think that most motherboards don't support ready-wifi, correct?
2.) I was planning to take my HDD out of my HP computer and use it for my new build. Since I do not have a Windows 7 disc and I plan to purchase a new motherboard, do I have to buy Windows 7 or is there a way to do this since I have a Windows 7 product key?
I think these are my two biggest issues after doing a bit of research. Any help is great. Thanks guys.
If Windows came with your HP computer, it's most likely an OEM copy and can't be transferred to another PC - if that's the case, you'll need another copy of Windows.Piercedveil said:Quoting myself to see if anyone could help![]()
Unless you find a motherboard with built in wifi, yes, you will have to buy a wifi card.Piercedveil said:Quoting myself to see if anyone could help![]()
Wichu said:If Windows came with your HP computer, it's most likely an OEM copy and can't be transferred to another PC - if that's the case, you'll need another copy of Windows.
mkenyon said:Unless you find a motherboard with built in wifi, yes, you will have to buy a wifi card.
For windows 7 keys, the ones they use for pre-built rigs are generally OEM keys that can't be transfered. You can give it a shot and say that you had to replace your HDD when you call to activate. They're not going to lock you up for it or anything![]()
knitoe said:Spending that much, I would go with, at least, a good 1000W PSU. With bare min and no overclocking, that setup is using ~700W which would be 82% load of AX850 rating. Personally, I try to to stay <60%.
snoopen said:What are you up to with the ram?
ColonialRaptor said:PPL!!!!! We need to change the topic title or something... We need to get people to STOP ORDERING NEW COMPUTERS FOR AT LEAST A WEEK. THE NEW GEAR COMES OUT NEXT WEEK AND IF THEY BUY SOMETHING THIS WEEK AND FIND OUT THE NEW POWERFUL STUFF COMES OUT NEXT WEEK THEY MIGHT JUST BE SHATTERED THAT THEY MISSED OUT!!!!
Read the manual.Labombadog said:Not sure if anybody can help but I recently bought a retail i5 2600k. Used its stock cooler. And I am getting hotter than normal temps. I shouldn't be getting 91c while playing a game with a stock cooler. All four prongs of the stock cooler clicked into the board, and I screwed it a bit tighter. Either way, I am getting an CORSAIR Hydro Series H60 cooler tomorrow. I hope I don't have a defected cpu.
Fingers crossed that EVGA will "step-up" a normal 560 ti for a 448 core one...Terproerg said:The 448 core 560ti is comming out at the end this month. Makes me mad cause i just bought a 560 ti a week ago. Info here. Seems like the power isnt going to be much higher either. Considering it should be a decent performance boost.
Yeah I did that first and it was still the same. And I read on a forum to make it tighter. Thanks......Hazaro said:Read the manual.
You only push it in. You turn the notches to RELEASE the heatsink.
Can you link me? I've never heard of this.Labombadog said:Yeah I did that first and it was still the same. And I read on a forum to make it tighter. Thanks......
Labombadog said:What comes out next week?
ntel's next platform for enthusiasts (successor to LGA1366, X58), will consist of a 2011-pin LGA socket, the Sandy Bridge-E (enthusiast) processor that features a massive quad-channel DDR3 memory controller and 32+ lane PCI-Express 2.0 hub, and the X79 chipset. Intel is looking to skip the 6-series chipset family with its next high-end platform chipset, and perhaps it makes sense since the platform is slated for Q4 2011. The X79 is a PCH (platform controller hub), like P55 and P67, since Intel has reorganized the platform. The beefy PCI-E hub housed in the X58 northbridge is relocated to the processor die, and the southbridge is given a much needed overhaul in terms of connectivity.
The X79 is much bigger than P67 in terms of connectivity and features. Differences start right at the interconnect. While P67 connects to the processor over DMI (physical PCI-Express 2.0 x4), X79 supplements this link with an additional PCI-Express 2.0 x4 link to the processor's PCI-E hub if the user chooses so, in the EFI setup program. The chipset bus hence ends up with 8 GB/s of bandwidth, and wait till you hear what will make use of it: a 10-port SATA 6 Gb/s RAID controller integrated to the PCH! That is a huge improvement in terms of storage connectivity, which is limping with 2-port SATA 6 Gb/s (next to four 3 Gb/s ports) on 6-series chipsets.....
I tried looking for it, but couldn't find it. It was a random google find. lolHazaro said:Can you link me? I've never heard of this.