Pc Rig Questions
#1
Posted 21 May 2015 - 12:43 PM
Currently: Sabertooth 990fx r2.0, FX-8120, R9 270x GPU, 8gb DDR3 1866 ram.
My proc burnt out, my HDD crapped out, and I'm thinking it was my PSU causing it, or excessive heat buildup, not sure yet. My PSU is LSP Ultra 750w ATX and am thinking about going to a modular to cut down on cables inside to get better airflow. Am also considering getting a liquid cooling sys for the CPU(fan was exsessively noisy).
Any suggestion appreciated, but especially interested in CPU feedback. Thanks.
#2
Posted 21 May 2015 - 01:08 PM
Liquid cooling would be a good idea. If you want a good air cooler in order to avoid liquid cooling, look at the higher-end Noctua coolers. They're not usually as loud and they're some of the most effective air coolers out there. With cooling, most of the time you get what you pay for.
A solid PSU might also be a good idea. I recommend Seasonic. SuperFlower PSUs are also decent. Lots of the best PSUs out there from other manufacturers are OEMed by those two. Do your research. If you have the pennies to spare, Seasonic makes a modular 80+ platinum certified 760W PSU that I can personally vouch for. it's quiet, runs cool, and has excellent performance.
#3
Posted 21 May 2015 - 01:15 PM
For Coolers, I'd Recommend the Cooler Master Hyper 212 Series if you want to stay with Air Cooling, if you go For Liquid Cooling, I'd say do it right the first time and spend the Money on a Swiftech Unit.
For PSUs, I'd say Seasonic or XFX (Or another Brand that Seasonic Builds for)
if you have the $$$, I'd say go for something like this:
PCPartPicker part list / Price breakdown by merchant
CPU: Intel Core i5-4690K 3.5GHz Quad-Core Processor ($219.99 @ SuperBiiz)
CPU Cooler: Swiftech H240-X 90.0 CFM Liquid CPU Cooler ($183.99 @ Amazon)
Motherboard: Asus MAXIMUS VII HERO ATX LGA1150 Motherboard ($197.99 @ SuperBiiz)
Storage: Western Digital BLACK SERIES 1TB 3.5" 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive ($67.50 @ SuperBiiz)
Power Supply: XFX XTR 650W 80+ Gold Certified Fully-Modular ATX Power Supply ($94.99 @ Amazon)
Total: $764.46
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2015-05-21 17:19 EDT-0400
Edited by Lord Letto, 21 May 2015 - 01:19 PM.
#4
Posted 21 May 2015 - 01:36 PM
If not, then we check down into dealing directly with your question: Vishera is better, yes; But after that is "Will Cryengine miss the fourth Module?" The 22DEC2014 Patch did something magical for Piledriver derivatives, and there was some devlopment work put into it's settings, but somehow, I just think a '70E would be better.
And, yeah: Google a review of any PSU you threaten to pay money for …
#5
Posted 21 May 2015 - 02:18 PM
The CPU light on the mobo lights up, does not go out, and I don't get the beep. I was going to recover my drive to my smaller backup drive with a Hirens disk since I had nothing on it and that's when the proc light started staying on solid and the fans weren't firing up. This was my first PC home build that I made right after the launch of the original closed beta, so I've run it hard and put it away wet for several years now.
TY for the posts! I'll definitely check into this info.
#6
Posted 21 May 2015 - 02:28 PM
Zekester81, on 21 May 2015 - 12:43 PM, said:
Currently: Sabertooth 990fx r2.0, FX-8120, R9 270x GPU, 8gb DDR3 1866 ram.
My proc burnt out, my HDD crapped out, and I'm thinking it was my PSU causing it, or excessive heat buildup, not sure yet. My PSU is LSP Ultra 750w ATX and am thinking about going to a modular to cut down on cables inside to get better airflow. Am also considering getting a liquid cooling sys for the CPU(fan was exsessively noisy).
Any suggestion appreciated, but especially interested in CPU feedback. Thanks.
I built computers for two of my friends (one an artist, the other a gamer) that are built around the 6350 and they have had no complaints. spend the extra though and get the 8350 if you can. I use an Antec H20 for cpu cooling. Go with a corsair or thermaltake (easier to install)
Edited by Gremlich Johns, 21 May 2015 - 02:30 PM.
#8
Posted 21 May 2015 - 04:31 PM
Goose, on 21 May 2015 - 02:42 PM, said:
Holy crap, my main power cable wasn't quite in all the way on the MOBO. I would have never checked that if you hadn't have said something because without a super close look it looked seated. Saw it when I was getting ready to pull the GPU. Lmao, cpu fires now. I think I need a new PSU because the 24 pin cable has wiggle room without actually lifting the tab. Now I wonder how that happened... I guess all I need to get is a HDD, and maybe a PSU with a tighter clip on the cable.
\
Edit: TY for all the suggestions anyways everyone. Now I think I know some of the things I want to upgrade on it, and for my next build too(for the kids). Still going to look into those PSUs and a Nocturne or liquid cooling sys.
Edited by Zekester81, 21 May 2015 - 04:42 PM.
#9
Posted 22 May 2015 - 04:35 AM
Zekester81, on 21 May 2015 - 04:31 PM, said:
Holy crap, my main power cable wasn't quite in all the way on the MOBO. I would have never checked that if you hadn't have said something because without a super close look it looked seated. Saw it when I was getting ready to pull the GPU. Lmao, cpu fires now. I think I need a new PSU because the 24 pin cable has wiggle room without actually lifting the tab. Now I wonder how that happened... I guess all I need to get is a HDD, and maybe a PSU with a tighter clip on the cable.
\
Edit: TY for all the suggestions anyways everyone. Now I think I know some of the things I want to upgrade on it, and for my next build too(for the kids). Still going to look into those PSUs and a Nocturne or liquid cooling sys.
Good catch then!
Given as above you stated your budget tends to be on the low side, most of Seasonic PSU's will be an over expense.
EVGA makes some solid lower cost units.
But always google and read reviews.
#10
Posted 22 May 2015 - 05:46 AM
DV McKenna, on 22 May 2015 - 04:35 AM, said:
Good catch then!
Given as above you stated your budget tends to be on the low side, most of Seasonic PSU's will be an over expense.
EVGA makes some solid lower cost units.
But always google and read reviews.
WAT?
Seasonic and EVGA PSUs at similar/same wattage are within a few dollars of each other on Newegg unless you're also including pricing on refurb units (please never buy a refurb PSU, guys). EVGA units are OEMed from multiple manufacturers and you have to do a ton of research into specific models to try and figure out which one is coming from where. Obviously Seasonic makes their own units.
There was that one EVGA unit that we've repeatedly recommended, and I believe it's a SuperFlower unit that is of very good build quality with good performance. I have no objections to that one specifically, but other ones... yeah, do your research or maybe spend the $0-10 extra and just get a Seasonic right off the bat.
#11
Posted 22 May 2015 - 07:23 AM
xWiredx, on 22 May 2015 - 05:46 AM, said:
Seasonic and EVGA PSUs at similar/same wattage are within a few dollars of each other on Newegg unless you're also including pricing on refurb units (please never buy a refurb PSU, guys). EVGA units are OEMed from multiple manufacturers and you have to do a ton of research into specific models to try and figure out which one is coming from where. Obviously Seasonic makes their own units.
There was that one EVGA unit that we've repeatedly recommended, and I believe it's a SuperFlower unit that is of very good build quality with good performance. I have no objections to that one specifically, but other ones... yeah, do your research or maybe spend the $0-10 extra and just get a Seasonic right off the bat.
Your so off base these days when you try to push your favourite brands man
The 650GS your talking about (i think we're talking about the same unit) is made by Seasonic.
The EVGA units made by superflower and based of the leadex line of SF PSU's are the SuperNova G2/P2/T2 (you only have to go as far as your second google result for the newbies) so again it's hardly a "ton of research"
The others by FSP mostly and they are definitely mixed.
Alternatively you can go here for every PSU OEM http://www.realhardt...os/Page2293.htm
In terms of prices again your off (but not by much) *unless Newegg has some crazy deals not listed on part picker*
EVGA 650GS $64.99
EVGA G2 750W $95.99
Seasonic SS 650W $123.98
Seasonic 750KM3 $128.88
https://pcpartpicker...&sort=a9&page=1
So not quite your $0-$10 difference, and if someones on a budget as the OP said he would be that's $60-30 saved or recycled into CPU/GPU etc while still netting a quality reliable PSU.
Edited by DV McKenna, 22 May 2015 - 07:25 AM.
#12
Posted 22 May 2015 - 07:51 AM
If you do a power search on Newegg and only select Seasonic and EVGA, you can see what I'm talking about. I wouldn't rely on that pcpartspicker site for prices since they seem like they can change minutes after you select something. it's also missing tons of models and prices. Hardly what I would call reliable in that regard.
That site with a list of what is OEMed by who is awesome. Been awhile since I needed to search for one so I wasn't aware there was such a nice, organized list. Add that to the list of things PGI should sticky in here but doesn't.
#13
Posted 22 May 2015 - 07:57 AM
xWiredx, on 22 May 2015 - 07:51 AM, said:
If you do a power search on Newegg and only select Seasonic and EVGA, you can see what I'm talking about. I wouldn't rely on that pcpartspicker site for prices since they seem like they can change minutes after you select something. it's also missing tons of models and prices. Hardly what I would call reliable in that regard.
That site with a list of what is OEMed by who is awesome. Been awhile since I needed to search for one so I wasn't aware there was such a nice, organized list. Add that to the list of things PGI should sticky in here but doesn't.
Goose should be a volunteer mod for the HW forum
#14
Posted 22 May 2015 - 08:42 AM
… The Guide I think about writing keeps growing like a tumor …
Edited by Goose, 22 May 2015 - 08:43 AM.
#16
Posted 22 May 2015 - 10:44 AM
#17
Posted 22 May 2015 - 02:40 PM
#18
#19
Posted 23 May 2015 - 09:19 AM
Only given it a quick look over ( the best and the worst) and it looks pretty accurate to me.
#20
Posted 23 May 2015 - 09:39 AM
Still, I think it puts most things where they should be relative to each other at least.
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