"I Need a New PC!" 2014 Part 2. Read OP, your 2500K will run Witcher 3. MX100s! 970!

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Probably a stupid question, but if I gut a home PC to replace it with gaming parts, does it need a new OS?

You should be able to replace most parts without re-installing the OS.

APART FROM!!!

The motherboard and/or CPU.

Hard drives with the OS on them will either need cloning onto a new drive if you're replacing. Not if you're just adding an additional drive.
 
You should be able to replace most parts without re-installing the OS.

APART FROM!!!

The motherboard and/or CPU.

Hard drives with the OS on them will either need cloning onto a new drive if you're replacing. Not if you're just adding an additional drive.

So if I wanted to replace the motherboard, it definitely needs a new OS?
 
So if I wanted to replace the motherboard, it definitely needs a new OS?

A new OS install yes. You wouldn't have to buy a new OS necessarily.

What OS are you running now and does the machine have a sticker on it with the license key? If so, you should be alright.

If not, you can buy a Windows 8 key from Reddit Software Swap for peanuts. Try a reinstall of your current OS first but make sure you've got an alternative way of getting online/downloading an ISO/putting it on a flash drive first.

While you might get away with using the same OS install, I would not recommend it for stability's sake
 
A new OS install yes. You wouldn't have to buy a new OS necessarily.

What OS are you running now and does the machine have a sticker on it with the license key? If so, you should be alright.

If not, you can buy a Windows 8 key from Reddit Software Swap for peanuts. Try a reinstall of your current OS first but make sure you've got an alternative way of getting online/downloading an ISO/putting it on a flash drive first.

While you might get away with using the same OS install, I would not recommend it for stability's sake

I was thinking of maybe trying to transfer the license from this computer to a new desktop, but I've heard that it cannot be done with a license from a pre-built or a laptop.
 
I was thinking of maybe trying to transfer the license from this computer to a new desktop, but I've heard that it cannot be done with a license from a pre-built or a laptop.

You might get away with it if the license key is printed on a sticker on the machine say if you have an older Windows 7 machine. But more recently OS license keys are embedded in the BIOS to prevent transfers etc.

Personally, I'd just get a Windows 8.1 key from Reddit, download the ISO and use it to create a bootable USB flash drive BEFORE swapping the motherboard and then perform a clean 8.1 install with that. Just to be sure. They're like $10-20 I think.
 
You might get away with it if the license key is printed on a sticker on the machine say if you have an older Windows 7 machine. But more recently OS license keys are embedded in the BIOS to prevent transfers etc.

Personally, I'd just get a Windows 8.1 key from Reddit, download the ISO and use it to create a bootable USB flash drive BEFORE swapping the motherboard and then perform a clean 8.1 install with that. Just to be sure. They're like $10-20 I think.

I'll give a Reddit key a try when I get a new PC then. Thanks :3
 
So I bought a new PC without much deep knowledge about the subject. I hope it's not a total joke. Please tell me if I could have done something better / didn't need a specific component / could have gotten one for a better price etc. I would like to learn for the future! The PC will mostly be used for gaming and emulating.

Processor: Intel Core i7 4790 up to 4 GHz
Processor cooling: Noctua NH-D15
Working memory: Kingston HyperX Genesis DDR3-2133 16GB (4x4GB)
SSD: Adata XPG SX910 256GB
Harddrive: 2x Seagate Barracuda 2TB
Mainboard: Asus Z97-Deluxe WLAN, Bluetooth
Video card: MSI GTX 770 TF OC 2GB
Sound card: Creative Sound Blaster Audigy RX
Power supply: Cooler Master V850 850W 80+ Gold
Casing: Corsair Obsidian 750D

So what do you think? Is this good enough for today's and future games? Is something missing / too much?

Building off of Knch's post:

As far as I know, the CPU, motherboard, case and memory are good. (I'm assuming you meant the 4790K given that you have a friggin' NH-D15.)
I'm not sure what you need the sound card for, but I'll assume you didn't want to rely on the Deluxe's onboard for whatever reason.
In the case of the CPU cooler, there's better air coolers that are less comically huge, but that one's still quite good.
SSD isn't too bad, but in the now/immediate future, the 250GB Samsung 840 EVO and the 256GB Crucial MX100 are much better value propositions.
Hard drives have been a crapshoot past 1TB since before Seagate bought out Samsung's platter drive division, so as long as you're keeping those Barracudas backed up, go hog wild.

Now for the bad news: that PSU is overkill for a single-card build and the GPU is kind of a bad value when the R9 280X costs as much.

Overall, though, it should be very good for today's games and at least good for future games (to a point).
 
More than plenty for today's games and the foreseeable future.

Double check if that cooler will fit, because it is massive! (I managed to get the D14 into my 600T, but only barely (and with plenty of cursing))
If you want 16GB, it's better to get two larger DIMMs than 4 smaller ones. (Mostly a personal opinion)
Look for a Samsung 840 EVO or Crucial MX100 SSD, those should be cheaper.
There are better value GPUs available, a 290 for instance.
You can get away with a less powerful PSU, 600W should give you plenty of margin.

Building off of Knch's post:

As far as I know, the CPU, motherboard, case and memory are good. (I'm assuming you meant the 4790K given that you have a friggin' NH-D15.)
I'm not sure what you need the sound card for, but I'll assume you didn't want to rely on the Deluxe's onboard for whatever reason.
In the case of the CPU cooler, there's better air coolers that are less comically huge, but that one's still quite good.
SSD isn't too bad, but in the now/immediate future, the 250GB Samsung 840 EVO and the 256GB Crucial MX100 are much better value propositions.
Hard drives have been a crapshoot past 1TB since before Seagate bought out Samsung's platter drive division, so as long as you're keeping those Barracudas backed up, go hog wild.

Now for the bad news: that PSU is overkill for a single-card build and the GPU is kind of a bad value when the R9 280X costs as much.

Overall, though, it should be very good for today's games and at least good for future games (to a point).

Thanks for your input guys!

With some shame I must admit that I'm not building it myself, but a company does it for me, so they're installing the components. That was before I started reading this thread and now I really really wish that I'd bought the components independently and built the pc myself. Alas, with what you've said about the DH-15 being such a huge thing, do you guys think this could cause issues with the air ventilation? (And the CPU isn't the 4790K version, unfortunately, but they gave me the possibility of overclocking the 4790 up to 4Ghz, for whatever it's worth). Would the standard cooler have been enough for this?

Now I've read that 850W and 600W for the PSU shouldn't make that big of a difference in electronic costs, is that true? Or should I exchange it immediately?
 
Thanks for your input guys!

With some shame I must admit that I'm not building it myself, but a company does it for me, so they're installing the components. That was before I started reading this thread and now I really really wish that I'd bought the components independently and built the pc myself. Alas, with what you've said about the DH-15 being such a huge thing, do you guys think this could cause issues with the air ventilation? (And the CPU isn't the 4790K version, unfortunately, but they gave me the possibility of overclocking the 4790 up to 4Ghz, for whatever it's worth). Would the standard cooler have been enough for this?

Now I've read that 850W and 600W for the PSU shouldn't make that big of a difference in electronic costs, is that true? Or should I exchange it immediately?

DH-15 being huge only has implications for mounting it, you can't screw it down with the fans attached and attaching the fans inside a case can be a real hassle. The standard cooler blows, a DH-15 is complete overkill when not overclocking (you aren't really overclocking,) most tower coolers with a large fan should be able to handle a 4790 though.

PSU: It's about saving cost up front, not when in use. No need to exchange it if you already have it.
 
So I bought a new PC without much deep knowledge about the subject. I hope it's not a total joke. Please tell me if I could have done something better / didn't need a specific component / could have gotten one for a better price etc. I would like to learn for the future! The PC will mostly be used for gaming and emulating.

Processor: Intel Core i7 4790 up to 4 GHz
Processor cooling: Noctua NH-D15
Working memory: Kingston HyperX Genesis DDR3-2133 16GB (4x4GB)
SSD: Adata XPG SX910 256GB
Harddrive: 2x Seagate Barracuda 2TB
Mainboard: Asus Z97-Deluxe WLAN, Bluetooth
Video card: MSI GTX 770 TF OC 2GB
Sound card: Creative Sound Blaster Audigy RX
Power supply: Cooler Master V850 850W 80+ Gold
Casing: Corsair Obsidian 750D

So what do you think? Is this good enough for today's and future games? Is something missing / too much?

Its not bad, but honestly it seems like you overspent in a few areas (mobo, storage, RAM) and could have saved money to put towards a better GPU. The 770 is good, but a step behind the 780's or R9 290's.
 
For those that have done an mATX form factor design, do you find it superior to ATX or E-ATX? Also, is cooling a problem? I would think temps would be higher in such cramped spaces.
 
For those that have done an mATX form factor design, do you find it superior to ATX or E-ATX? Also, is cooling a problem? I would think temps would be higher in such cramped spaces.
No, hardware these stays pretty cool under cramped conditions. You can put the highest level Intel + 780Ti inside a tiny ITX case and have zero heat issues. mATX should probably be the standard for everyone, perfect size to build in yet not overly giant.
 
So, I'm thinking of lining the inside of my Node 304 with sound dampening foam. Yay or nay?

I'm also thinking of changing the cooling paste on my MSI 280X as it goes up to 90 degrees when gaming sometimes and the fan goes on max which sounds terribly.
As far as I can understand I should just change the paste on the GPU and not the VRAM?
 
Ok... my RAM situation is making me a little crazy right now.

I ordered 16gb (2x8) of RAM from Amazon Warehouse Deals.

When it arrives I install it and the BIOS tells me I have 8gb of RAM (2 sticks of 4gb, specifically).

I say WTF and register a complaint with Amazon.

Amazon, to their credit, immediately sends me a package containing 16gb (2x8) of RAM free of charge.

This morning I switch out the old RAM for the new RAM.

AGAIN the BIOS tells me I am packing 8gb (2 sticks of 4gb). WAT THE SHIT.

For my sanity's sake I put ALL FOUR sticks of RAM into my motherboard. THIS, the BIOS tells me, equals 16gb of RAM.

Did Amazon REALLY send me 8gb instead of 16gb TWICE? Do I not know how to correctly install DDR3 RAM? I'm a bit hungover and packing for a camping trip and this is just tweaking me out...
 
Ok... my RAM situation is making me a little crazy right now.

I ordered 16gb (2x8) of RAM from Amazon Warehouse Deals.

When it arrives I install it and the BIOS tells me I have 8gb of RAM (2 sticks of 4gb, specifically).

I say WTF and register a complaint with Amazon.

Amazon, to their credit, immediately sends me a package containing 16gb (2x8) of RAM free of charge.

This morning I switch out the old RAM for the new RAM.

AGAIN the BIOS tells me I am packing 8gb (2 sticks of 4gb). WAT THE SHIT.

For my sanity's sake I put ALL FOUR sticks of RAM into my motherboard. THIS, the BIOS tells me, equals 16gb of RAM.

Did Amazon REALLY send me 8gb instead of 16gb TWICE? Do I not know how to correctly install DDR3 RAM? I'm a bit hungover and packing for a camping trip and this is just tweaking me out...

It should say on the RAM somewhere the size of it, like this

GSkill_RipJaws_2000MHz_CL9_8GB_Label.jpg
 
Long time lurker but my first "I need a new PC" post.

I've been reading these threads daily over the last 6 months while i saved and purchased parts for my new gaming rig. The last rig i built was 9 years ago (i've been mostly console last gen).

I just wanted to say thanks to all the gurus here sharing awesome info in a friendly and impartial way.

I'll be building next weekend with a friend. I'll post some pics if it doesn't disappear in cloud of smoke.
 
So I bought a new PC without much deep knowledge about the subject. I hope it's not a total joke. Please tell me if I could have done something better / didn't need a specific component / could have gotten one for a better price etc. I would like to learn for the future! The PC will mostly be used for gaming and emulating.

Processor: Intel Core i7 4790 up to 4 GHz
Processor cooling: Noctua NH-D15
Working memory: Kingston HyperX Genesis DDR3-2133 16GB (4x4GB)
SSD: Adata XPG SX910 256GB
Harddrive: 2x Seagate Barracuda 2TB
Mainboard: Asus Z97-Deluxe WLAN, Bluetooth
Video card: MSI GTX 770 TF OC 2GB
Sound card: Creative Sound Blaster Audigy RX
Power supply: Cooler Master V850 850W 80+ Gold
Casing: Corsair Obsidian 750D

So what do you think? Is this good enough for today's and future games? Is something missing / too much?

1. CPU should have been 4790k as even without OC it's 10% faster.
2. Cooler is top quality choice
3. Ram seems ok altrough i prefer Gskill or Crucial
4. SSD is fine altrough cheaper MX100 would do the trick
5. If you bought two HDDs to make raid 0 then it's pointless outside of working on huge graphic projects.
6. Mobo is ultra high end - cheaper one would be enough
7. 770 is ok but with other components slightly downgraded it could have been better one like radeon 290
8. Case is great quality
9. Can't comment on psu/sound card as i don't recognise them.
 
What's the consensus on Crossfire these days? Mostly painless or representative of early 21st century PC gaming?
There's a handful of games that are fairly popular that do not get profiles, and do not have much of a workaround. DX9 4K games are a disaster still. Most games will not have a profile within the first week that they are out.

Basically, I would only ever advise it if you aren't getting adequate performance on your current display. You also need to be willing to google fixes and workarounds when things aren't going right. If you get frustrated at the idea of that, do not do it. If you like to tinker with things, then it will be just fine.
 
I found a PC at a local Multimedia Store chain for 1,300 Bucks

CPU: Intel i7-4770
RAM: 16 GB DDR3-RAM 1.600 MHz
GPU: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 770 2GB VRAM
HDD: 2x SATA 2TB HDD 7.200 U/Min
MainBoard: Intel® GA-B85M-D3H
SoundCard: HD Audio ALC892
Windows 8 64-Bit
PowerSupply: 700 Watt BeQuiet
Housing: Coolermaster HAF XM

is the price worth it PCGaf?
 
So I bought a new PC without much deep knowledge about the subject. I hope it's not a total joke. Please tell me if I could have done something better / didn't need a specific component / could have gotten one for a better price etc. I would like to learn for the future! The PC will mostly be used for gaming and emulating.

Processor: Intel Core i7 4790 up to 4 GHz
Processor cooling: Noctua NH-D15
Working memory: Kingston HyperX Genesis DDR3-2133 16GB (4x4GB)
SSD: Adata XPG SX910 256GB
Harddrive: 2x Seagate Barracuda 2TB
Mainboard: Asus Z97-Deluxe WLAN, Bluetooth
Video card: MSI GTX 770 TF OC 2GB
Sound card: Creative Sound Blaster Audigy RX
Power supply: Cooler Master V850 850W 80+ Gold
Casing: Corsair Obsidian 750D

So what do you think? Is this good enough for today's and future games? Is something missing / too much?

As everybody already said, there are a few nosense choices here, why would you choose a so expensive motherboard if you're not gonna be able to overclock your no K cpu? I would have bought a cheaper z97 motherboard picking up an i7 4770k instead, which once overclocked has the same performance of the 4790k and can be found at a better price than the new 4790k, then the RAM, 16gb are definitely too much, 8gb Would be more than enough for gaming, same for the PSU, unless yo're planning a sli configuration 850W are overkill, a 650W would have been enough, and with all the money you could have saved you could have bought a way better VGA(which is the most important part of a gaming PC) such as a custom R9 290 OC 4GB
 
I found a PC at a local Multimedia Store chain for 1,300 Bucks

CPU: Intel i7-4770
RAM: 16 GB DDR3-RAM 1.600 MHz
GPU: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 770 2GB VRAM
HDD: SATA 2TB HDD 7.200 U/Min
MainBoard: Intel® GA-B85M-D3H
SoundCard: HD Audio ALC892
Windows 8 64-Bit
PowerSupply: 700 Watt BeQuiet

is the price worth it PCGaf?

Not terrible, depending on what the case is, if it has an aftermarket cooler and other peripherals it's about $100-250 more than building yourself. You would be better off get a Z motherboard and a 4650k and have NCIX build it for you for $50
 
I found a PC at a local Multimedia Store chain for 1,300 Bucks

CPU: Intel i7-4770
RAM: 16 GB DDR3-RAM 1.600 MHz
GPU: NVIDIA GeForce GTX 770 2GB VRAM
HDD: SATA 2TB HDD 7.200 U/Min
MainBoard: Intel® GA-B85M-D3H
SoundCard: HD Audio ALC892
Windows 8 64-Bit
PowerSupply: 700 Watt BeQuiet

is the price worth it PCGaf?

It's not as awful as the pre assembled PC usually are for that price, but it's definitely not worth that price either, i would suggest to assemble a PC by yoursef, choosing better component at the same total price.
 
Not terrible, depending on what the case is, if it has an aftermarket cooler and other peripherals it's about $100-250 more than building yourself. You would be better off get a Z motherboard and a 4650k and have NCIX build it for you for $50
Thanks!
Well NCIX is not an option because i'm in Europe and would need an equivalent.
The housing is a Coolermaster 'HAF XM'-> http://www.coolermaster.com/case/mid-tower/haf-xm/
Also apparently it has two of these HDDs.

It's not as awful as the pre assembled PC usually are for that price, but it's definitely not worth that price either, i would suggest to assemble a PC by yoursef, choosing better component at the same total price.
Do you know a european site, preferably in the german speaking areas, i could check?
 
Thanks again for your input guys, it's much appreciated! In hindsight I recognize that I was being silly and fell for the more-expensive-is-better-trap, despite me not having a really good knowledge about those components at all. In the future I will be 100x more careful in choosing the components, that's for sure. But for now, I guess I'll nonetheless happily await my new pc and delve into the world of pc gaming and emulating.

As for the CPU choice, I read somewhere that the 4790 would be slightly better than the 4770K in terms of performance (I guess I overlooked the Overclocking part), that's why I chose it. My primary choice would have been the 4790K, which wasn't available then, sadly.
 
Anyone ever have lip sync issues on the PC? I feel like my video is always lagging a bit from the audio and consequently lip syncing is off. My home theater has plenty of options to adjust for that but I never see any discussion about fixing it on PC.

Has anyone seen this or have some advice? I'm running a Geforce GTX 670 connected to a Dell U2410. Audio is Realtek via my Gigabyte motherboard.
 
Dumb question: can VGA cables carry 1920x1080 at 60hz? I'm thinking of buying one and a 3.5 audio cable to hook my PC with my TV, if I connect it with HDMI I get audio issues, windows doesn't detect the TV speakers through HDMI unless i reboot :/
 
Should i upgrade? Least costly path to get better gaming performances?

I have:
AMD X6 1090T black edition (not overclocked, maybe its time..)
MSI 890FXA-GD70
4GB of some ram i dont even remember the speed..
80GB SSD (getting very small) and 1TB HDD.
MSI GTX 460 1GB
Antec 750W psu

Main games i'll be playing (or aiming to) are Elite dangerous, Star ciziten, No man's sky, GTAV, Witcher 3. 1080p monitor, maybe oculus rift customer release but mostly for Elite and i dont think that game is too demanding (for now).

What do i need to do to run Witcher 3? (doesnt have to be max setting). Is it a pipe dream or feasible? I was thinking about CPU overclock, memory upgrade to 8GB and either a GTX 760 or R9-280X. Freaking 770 is expensive still. Cheap SSD too, im really tight in window partition disk now, freaking windows 7 keeps getting bigger and bigger.
 
What kinda budget? You're due a pretty major overhaul

~500$? Canadian too :(

Im back to being a student so, if it wasnt for that i would change the full thing but i cant really justify the money for that right now. I dont want to miss on the upcoming games though. 1090T overclocked cant keep up? Did the games get CPU hungry a lot? I've read that a GTX770 wouldnt be limited by an overclocked 1090T..
 
It's just that any AMD cpu will be behind what an intel can do.

For $500 Canadian I'd go up to 8gig of ram, overclock the cpu and wait a few months for the 800 series to drop or try to find a smokij g deal on a used videocard. Then save up for a while.
 
Whats the current feels on controllers for PC since Steampad is vaporware?

I see the Xbox 1 controller is ~50, its supposed to have better d pad than the 360 version.

I think 50 is about as high as I will go. Need it for sidescrollers, emulators, Dark Souls type stuff.
 
Controller comes down to personal preference. They all get the job done, though I suppose Xbone has slightly fewer hoops to jump through when it comes to compatibility. For couch gaming you might want to go PS4 since it has the trackpad.
 
Whats the current feels on controllers for PC since Steampad is vaporware?

I see the Xbox 1 controller is ~50, its supposed to have better d pad than the 360 version.

I think 50 is about as high as I will go. Need it for sidescrollers, emulators, Dark Souls type stuff.

I'm liking my DS4 for steam games more than I liked my 360 controller. I've yet to try the XBONE controller so I can't chime in on that.
 
Whats the current feels on controllers for PC since Steampad is vaporware?

I see the Xbox 1 controller is ~50, its supposed to have better d pad than the 360 version.

I think 50 is about as high as I will go. Need it for sidescrollers, emulators, Dark Souls type stuff.

I just use a 360 controller. It "just works," for lack of a better way to say it.
 
Please can the GAF geniuses chip in on the high-clock RAM limiting CPU overclock issue? If I get 1866MHz DDR3, how much would that limit my 4790k OC vs. 1600MHz if at all?
 
Whats the current feels on controllers for PC since Steampad is vaporware?

I see the Xbox 1 controller is ~50, its supposed to have better d pad than the 360 version.

I think 50 is about as high as I will go. Need it for sidescrollers, emulators, Dark Souls type stuff.

You can get a wired Rock Candy 360 controller for less and it had good build quality. I have the red colored one and it felt great while playing Ascent and Dead Space on PC.
 
Is playing games at settings that cause the GPU to run at or near max usage bad for the graphics card at all?

I wanted to really see what my GPU (MSI GTX 780 6GB) could do, so I cranked the settings up in WatchDogs, most at ultra and only stuff like SSAO, AA at one or two levels below the top. That's probably overkill and I'll tone down settings, but I was interested to see what the GPU could do. Here's some info while it was running in-game, although not much going on at this point which is another reason I think I need to cut the settings down a bit for more busy scenes later in the game:

vRwKE8i.png


It's the 99% GPU usage (it stayed between 97-99% all through the first cutscene and the bit of gameplay), and temps of between 78-80c that have me concerned the most.
 
Is playing games at settings that cause the GPU to run at or near max usage bad for the graphics card at all?

I wanted to really see what my GPU (MSI GTX 780 6GB) could do, so I cranked the settings up in WatchDogs, most at ultra and only stuff like SSAO, AA at one or two levels below the top. That's probably overkill and I'll tone down settings, but I was interested to see what the GPU could do. Here's some info while it was running in-game, although not much going on at this point which is another reason I think I need to cut the settings down a bit for more busy scenes later in the game:

vRwKE8i.png


It's the 99% GPU usage (it stayed between 97-99% all through the first cutscene and the bit of gameplay), and temps of between 78-80c that have me concerned the most.

It's fine.

Please can the GAF geniuses chip in on the high-clock RAM limiting CPU overclock issue? If I get 1866MHz DDR3, how much would that limit my 4790k OC vs. 1600MHz if at all?

It'll not hold back your CPU.
 
Hey guys

I'm reading up on multiple sites and since there's a high chance I'm building my own PC soon, I made up this list after all my research and advice received. Could use some input if this is a good idea for a PC that can hold me for a while and has good "fundamentals".

9YRWbQT.png


I'm just a bit unsure about the following:

- Is the motherboard overkill? It seems to have received very good reviews and looked like a good motherboard to base my PC on.

- Is the HDD any good? It's supposed to be for NAS but also good for PC? I could deal with less space but this is coming from laptops where 1TB was "huge".

- People who already purchased the case: is it truly super heavy and huge? Since the case is something that lasts you a while and you'll be looking at it...I'm unsure on the aesthetics/ergonomics.

- Both the AMD/Nvidia camps are telling me to either stick to that one as it has 4GB of VRAM, while others tell me to go to R9 290 for "better bang for your buck". I'm leaning towards Nvidia as any series of AMD I picked up before has had issues and left me a bit cold of going back AMD.

Thanks guys!
 
Setup my new 350d, gene vii and 4690K. Used psu, gpu, ram and soundcard from my old build.


Running at a measly 4.4ghz atm at 1.2v, 60c on load. 4.5 ghz passes strees tests and runs BF4 on the same voltage, but computer shut down randomly in Wildstar for some reason. 4.8 ghz and above needs >1.32v, but I don't know how I feel about 70+ temps on load at that voltage.
 
Look what just came in :D

Congrats ma dude! Looks good.

Question to the experts. At NCIX US, the case I want (Fractal Define R4, Arctic White w/ Window) is $84.99. This is great! Except the shipping shoots it up to a little over $100. But! If I get the cost to over $100 before shipping, it's only 5 bucks! So, what should I add to this to make it an even better deal? I figured a case fan, but the CM JetFlo's I want are out of stock. Any suggestions?
 
I'm no expert in using case fans but I'm an expert in reading endlessly about them.

People like the Gentle Typhoons, also the Thermalright TY-140. Noctua are among the best regarding noise/performance ratio but a bit pricier. This all coming from the perspective of someone obsessed with low-noise parts.
 
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