Scrap that graphics card, the integrated graphics of the i7 is perfectly capable of doing photoshop work, the rest sounds good, grab a decent H170 motherboard and you are good to go.
Nice, thanks a lot.
Scrap that graphics card, the integrated graphics of the i7 is perfectly capable of doing photoshop work, the rest sounds good, grab a decent H170 motherboard and you are good to go.
At the same price? Get the 270HU for sure. It'll last you longer.
If you don't mind turning down graphics settings to some degree you can get by fine at 1440p with a 970 (depending on the games you like to play).
I'd rather not have to turn down graphics settings though. 1080p/60+fps at ultra/high seems better than 1440p/sub 60fps/medium, but I've never had a chance to test it side by side.
First thing is to fill in the survey in the OP.I've had a laptop that was nice for college but I think I'm ready to upgrade that now I have some money and don't need the mobility of a laptop anymore. It's been almost 5 years since I got that laptop that was really nice but had an underpowered GPU. I haven't decided if I want to build my own or just customize one from a vendor. Could probably save a chunk of change and it would be a fun project.
What's the best way to start building a PC? I found some build guides on PC Gamer and of course we have some here. Should I just start ordering parts based on those?
Depends on what you play. I have a 970 and the XB270HU and I play (e.g.) project cars at 1440p and around 90 fps with most things turned up.
First thing is to fill in the survey in the OP.
I need to reseat my CPU cooler. What thermal paste should I get?
So I am going to try to bump my CPU up to 4.7 (via watching a youtube video with same mobo and CPU era).
What is the recommend software to use after? I also heard newer comments saying the 24 hour test is useless nowadays.
So I am going to try to bump my CPU up to 4.7 (via watching a youtube video with same mobo and CPU era).
What is the recommend software to use after? I also heard newer comments saying the 24 hour test is useless nowadays.
What's the recommended wattage of a PSU if I want to SLI either Pascal 1080s or 980ti's with potential overclocking of an i5-6600K as well as the GPU's?
So I have:
I7 3770K
Asus P8 Z77-V LK
Crosair CX750 80 PLUS® Bronze Certified Power Supply
16GB of DDR3-1600
TM Hyper TX3 CPU Cooler
How capable am I in OCing my CPU to at least 4.2? I think it is 4.2 I have never OC'd before and I am wondering about my PSU being able to.
What CPU, and what frequency do you have it at now? Cooler?
You don't even tell us what CPU, cooler and what mobo you have bro. Also I don't recommend overclocking with software, BIOS is not hard and is safer. For tests a couple hours of AIDA64 stability test or Prime95 should do.
• Windows 10
• RAM: 8GB DDR3
• Mobo: Gigabye Z97X-SLI
• CPU: Intel Core i5-4690K @ 3.50GHz
• GPU: EVGA GTX 970 Superclocked ACX 2.0
• PSU: EVGA SuperNOVA NEX 750 B
The D3D device was removed with DXGI_ERROR_DEVICE_RESET. This typically indicates a driver bug or GPU hardware failing/overheating. It you were running a game at the time of this error then the game may have triggered a driver bug or caused your GPU to overheat. Big Picture must exit.
Power Limit %: 110
Temp. Limit (C): 85
Core Clock: +130
Mem Clock: +0
What's the recommended wattage of a PSU if I want to SLI either Pascal 1080s or 980ti's with potential overclocking of an i5-6600K as well as the GPU's?
You'll definitely be safe with an 850w for SLI 980tis, not sure about OCing them though..
Maybe go with a 1000w to be safe for future gpus
You should play it safe and buy a 1000w PSU.
Short questions: What happens if my power supply is below the requirements?
Great question and I want to know the answer too.
I have never allowed this to happen but I am cutting it dangerously close Friday so I will let you know if it happens to me. I am crossing my fingers it isn't a fire.
My mobo supports laptop DC adapters and I am going to attempt 5350 and 750 ti on a measly 120w 19v brick which probably won't work. Stay tuned!
Short questions: What happens if my power supply is below the requirements?
I have the following setup:
Asus P8H67
i5-2500K @ 3.3GHz
RAM 2GB DDR3 @ 1033MHz
SSD 128GB
SSD 512GB
HDD 256GB
AMD Radeon HD7850 2GB
HDD Extern 2TB
with a 430W power supply. Everything works great.
Now, a friend of mine is giving away his old GTX680 2GB which I could use for free. But will this even work with my low power supply?
You'd probably be fine.
Get more RAM man.
Arc Mini R2 only needs the top HDD cage removed, leaving the bottom (3HDD) cage in tact allowing for 400mm length GPUs.
Theres also 2 SSD slots behind the motherboard tray.
Go with the 2666Mhz RAM, itll help those minimum frame rates.
The sale prices are only for a few more days. I know that they're releasing the new line soon, but I'm not looking to spend more than around $600.
Is it likely that the prices on Ti's will tank after next week? Or after the new cards are released? I'm not sure that I would see a sale quick enough to warrant waiting.
The main reason for the upgrade is because I want to run at least a 34" ultrawide and possibly a second monitor (not an ultrawide) with it. I hear that a Ti is the minimum I'd want for that kind of set up.
I have a 34" ultrawide monitor and a 970 and run damn near everything pretty well at 1440p. Your vanilla 980 should be plenty fine for now.
What games are you so concerned over on that setup exactly? I could give you insight as to how they handle on my rig before you blindly make a half-step upgrade in the face of Nvidia's announcement next week.
Depends on what you play. I have a 970 and the XB270HU and I play (e.g.) project cars at 1440p and around 90 fps with most things turned up.
First thing is to fill in the survey in the OP.
For Sale: US only
16GB DDR3 Ram http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B006WAGGUK/?tag=neogaf0e-20
I have four sticks in total. Each are 4 GB's. I would prefer to sell as much together as possible. I bought them back in November and now I'm looking to get a new mob that takes DDR4 Ram.
Prices are shipped: (I prefer to ship in packs of two at least so that is why I asking more for just one stick)
1 stick- $20
2 sticks- $30
4 sticks- $55
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*Re-posting from the i5 2500k thread*
PC GAF I need your help!
I'm posting in this thread because I can't create threads yet. I recently came across some Amazon credit and want to spend it on upgrading my PC. I'm new to the PC scene and recently purchased my roommate's old computer.
My specs now are:
AMD Radeon 7850
i5 2500k 3.3 ghz
8 gb of ram
I have a msi gtx 970 4g on the way and still have about $200 to spend.
I want to know what else I should get. I know I want to get some new fans or cooling since the ones on the rig now are really loud. Does anybody have any suggestions? Should I get more ram? I saw some specs for recent games were recommending cpu's better than mine. Can I still play them with the 2500k? Sorry for my lack of knowledge; I'm trying to learn!
Thanks in advance!
-JH
I would overclock that CPU to 4.2ghz. Then pick up a after market CPU cooler to keep it cool and a 500gb ssd.
I'm looking to buy a CPU today for my i5 2500k. My mobo is a p8z68-vlx. Someone has already recommended the cryorig h5 universal as it's easy to install aswell. After looking up on it I'm worried it may be to wide and take over my first expansion slot which has a wifi card in. Anyone know if this cooler is ok or is there another one that is a bit smaller, really want to try and OC the 2500k to 4.4 or a bit higher.
You meant cooler right? Would all-in-one liquid CPU cooler work?
Yes just edited meant cooler and you have any in mind. Just when I looked at water coolers they don't seem much better than air and the ones that are a lot bettrr are expensive.
I'm looking to buy a CPU cooler today for my i5 2500k. My mobo is a p8z68-vlx. Someone has already recommended the cryorig h5 universal as it's easy to install aswell. After looking up on it I'm worried it may be to wide and take over my first expansion slot which has a wifi card in. Anyone know if this cooler is ok or is there another one that is a bit smaller, really want to try and OC the 2500k to 4.4 or a bit higher.
So I have:
I7 3770K
Asus P8 Z77-V LK
Crosair CX750 80 PLUS® Bronze Certified Power Supply
16GB of DDR3-1600
TM Hyper TX3 CPU Cooler
How capable am I in OCing my CPU to at least 4.2? I think it is 4.2 I have never OC'd before and I am wondering about my PSU being able to.
I'm using the H5 Universal and it is a beast, kept my 4.6GHz 4790K at sub 60 degree at load, very easy to install as well, just take the mobo out of the case.
From op:So once I get the balls to do it what software do I need to use to test with? I heard that 24 hour testing is old school and I only need like four hours or so.
From op:
OCCT allows you to stress test your CPU and GPU, along with GPU memory.
Prime95 allows you to stress test your CPU and RAM for stability.
FURMark allows you to stress test your video card.
Memtest86+ allows you to run a full memory scan to deal with the blue screen of death and system errors.
I usually just run prime95 for few hours and one run of newest 3dmark and then play games to see if anything is unstable.
What about for temps?
I would definitely give Logitech a try today, if you haven't in the last 15 years. I currently use a G502, and I really have no complaints other than it being on the heavier side and the scroll wheel is kinda weird.So crippled by choice looking at gaming mice right now I don't know what to do. Someone please help.
I'm just coming off a Death Adder that was mostly good up until the scroll wheel stopped responding. I temp fixed it with a piece of tape, but the plastic nub that was holding it in the mechanism is snapped off now, so it's either buy an OEM scroll wheel off ebay or get a new mouse. I'm currently having issues with my Razer keyboard (it has at least 2-3 bad switches in it I don't know how to replace), so I just don't trust the company anymore.
I'm using a $12 chinese knock off right now that's TERRIBLE (left click double clicks and the damn thing doesn't even sit flat on my desk due to how cheaply designed it is).
It's been about 15 years since I last tried one, but I've had NUMEROUS Logitech mice fail on me in the past. Button switches dying, etc.
I just don't know what to do anymore. It seems like these things, regardless of the manufacturer, are just built to fail (conveniently a month or two after your warranty is up) to keep us dumbasses continually buying new ones. I've long since given up expecting to own a mouse for years and years and have it not fail me.
So I want to spend $30-50 and hopefully that'll last me another warranty cycle. What do I buy guys?
Sorry for the rant.