But yes, that is one of the more important aspects.
[GUIDE] Hardware Mythbusters - An In-Depth Hardware Guide
#341
Posted 18 June 2012 - 04:18 PM
But yes, that is one of the more important aspects.
#342
Posted 18 June 2012 - 04:22 PM
but I digress. I really shouldn't be geeking out over stuff like this anyway.
#343
Posted 18 June 2012 - 04:27 PM
Battlecruiser, on 18 June 2012 - 04:22 PM, said:
but I digress. I really shouldn't be geeking out over stuff like this anyway.
I do know, and lol dude, I geek out over this stuff myself plenty of times, it's no big deal.
#344
Posted 18 June 2012 - 04:33 PM
Can always replace the stock fans on the H100 and while they've had quality controls, I'm really enjoying mine. Didn't want a custom cooling solution this time and was tired of the monster heatsink/fan setup. Temps on Ivy Bridge are never over 40c (under turbo) with an ambiant of 70-73 F.
If I needed to overclock I can and will with plenty of room, just I've yet to have anything even tax the Nvidia 670.
#345
Posted 18 June 2012 - 04:38 PM
#346
Posted 18 June 2012 - 04:39 PM
Gabriyel, on 18 June 2012 - 04:33 PM, said:
Can always replace the stock fans on the H100 and while they've had quality controls, I'm really enjoying mine. Didn't want a custom cooling solution this time and was tired of the monster heatsink/fan setup. Temps on Ivy Bridge are never over 40c (under turbo) with an ambiant of 70-73 F.
If I needed to overclock I can and will with plenty of room, just I've yet to have anything even tax the Nvidia 670.
lol. Any of these cases listed as being capable of a 240mm radiator can mount an H100, not just that corsair. (fyi in case you didn't know lol)
Though all the corsair cases I've seen so far are good, I chose the Thor V2 over it at the $150 price point for having superior air cooling capabilities and more room to work with.
#347
Posted 18 June 2012 - 04:52 PM
#348
Posted 18 June 2012 - 06:08 PM
The HAF X actually performs worse than the HAF932 simply because it has less airflow capacity.
(I have a 932 in case anyone was wondering, and at full tilt it can cycle ~370CFM, although it makes a racket doing so!)
And as a side note, the Rosewill Thor looks suspiciously like a HAF 9XX...
#349
Posted 18 June 2012 - 06:12 PM
stukinit, on 18 June 2012 - 06:08 PM, said:
The HAF X actually performs worse than the HAF932 simply because it has less airflow capacity.
(I have a 932 in case anyone was wondering, and at full tilt it can cycle ~370CFM, although it makes a racket doing so!)
And as a side note, the Rosewill Thor looks suspiciously like a HAF 9XX...
It actually has the same fan setup, more or less the same exact fans (same CFM settings), with a variable fin setup on top, and slightly different paneling, but in the cooling department is identical to the 932, but is $50+ cheaper. Hence why I chose it.
And the NZXT switch 810 is more or less the perfect value water cooling case out there on the higher end cases. you can stick a 420mm radiator on top and a 240mm on bottom. That will cool almost any setup.
And for the price of a 932, there's this from Rosewill; http://www.newegg.co...N82E16811147157
Bigger and even more airflow.
Edited by Vulpesveritas, 18 June 2012 - 06:15 PM.
#350
Posted 18 June 2012 - 06:33 PM
Vulpesveritas, on 18 June 2012 - 10:34 AM, said:
Though I can see why an ivy would be more wanted on someone not doing any extreme overclocking, I did list ivy for those not overclocking at all.
I suppose the enthusiast in myself is getting the better of me. I'd definitely say that an i5 3570K averages at about 4.5-4.6 GHz, where the increased IPC would make it on par with a SNB i5. Temperature is a concern, although IVB is rated for higher temperatures. On the other hand, power consumption is lower. IVB also has a superior GPU... just in case you're having a rainy day and need to get by on an IGP for a while.
Really though, I suppose you can't go wrong with either, although eventually Ivy Bridge will definitely be the better buy as Intel's 22nm process matures. Plus, if you're a risk taker like me, you could always take off the IHS and negate a lot of IVB's thermal issues... although that really doesn't apply to anyone here.
Quote
It has no relevancy to gaming workloads... that alone makes it irrelevant on this forum. They can't even code a decent GPU benchmark either... have you seen the GPU rankings? They're embarrasingly bad. Their hard drive tests are also terrible.
#351
Posted 18 June 2012 - 06:39 PM
Homeles, on 18 June 2012 - 06:33 PM, said:
Really though, I suppose you can't go wrong with either, although eventually Ivy Bridge will definitely be the better buy as Intel's 22nm process matures. Plus, if you're a risk taker like me, you could always take off the IHS and negate a lot of IVB's thermal issues... although that really doesn't apply to anyone here.
It has no relevancy to gaming workloads... that alone makes it irrelevant on this forum. They can't even code a decent GPU benchmark either... have you seen the GPU rankings? They're embarrasingly bad. Their hard drive tests are also terrible.
it seems that no one can be happy with the benchmarks I choose. When I choose a multithreaded benchmark showing multitasking capabilities, it's called horrible. When I try to show the most relevant benchmark based on Crysis 2, it gets called irrelevant for CPU testing.
Know any good CPU benchmark that shows multithreading capabilities along side gaming capabilities in a nice chart that can compare all the processors in this thread at once? lol
#352
Posted 18 June 2012 - 06:41 PM
Vulpesveritas, on 18 June 2012 - 06:39 PM, said:
Know any good CPU benchmark that shows multithreading capabilities along side gaming capabilities in a nice chart that can compare all the processors in this thread at once? lol
Haha, no I don't. It's a shame TPU doesn't have an aggregate CPU chart. AnandTech is good for 1 on 1 comparisons though.
#353
Posted 18 June 2012 - 06:48 PM
Homeles, on 18 June 2012 - 06:41 PM, said:
By the gods I wish TPU did have such a chart. and while AnandTech is good for 1 on 1 comparisons, getting a chart for each would be a bit... time consuming.
Even if I did manage to make these threads, Anandtech also lacks a large selection of games for its benchmarks. And none of them to my knowledge are modern multithreaded games either. So that's not a great solution even if I did take the time for that.
#354
Posted 18 June 2012 - 07:49 PM
Vulpesveritas, on 18 June 2012 - 06:39 PM, said:
Know any good CPU benchmark that shows multithreading capabilities along side gaming capabilities in a nice chart that can compare all the processors in this thread at once? lol
Sorry mate, if it was that easy, people would've posted it already
But regardless if the perfect set of benchmarks is out there ready for a copy paste or not, unfortunately passmark and GPU bound benchmarks aren't accurate for gaming, even if you have them all conveniently on one page.
However, Crysis 2 would probably the closest we have (aside from beta testing i guess) to a comparable engine, so that GTX 590 benchmark i thought was at least moderately relevant. If only it came in Dx11 too.
At any rate, it would be rather simple for those of you out there with Intel 8 thread / AMD 4 module CPUs to open up task manager / resource manager and alt tab mid game to check out your CPU usage, and see what the usage spread is like. That would settle quite a bit of the guesswork in the scaling of additional cores. So ... Get testing, people!
#355
Posted 18 June 2012 - 07:58 PM
iron wolf, on 18 June 2012 - 07:49 PM, said:
But regardless if the perfect set of benchmarks is out there ready for a copy paste or not, unfortunately passmark and GPU bound benchmarks aren't accurate for gaming, even if you have them all conveniently on one page.
However, Crysis 2 would probably the closest we have (aside from beta testing i guess) to a comparable engine, so that GTX 590 benchmark i thought was at least moderately relevant. If only it came in Dx11 too.
At any rate, it would be rather simple for those of you out there with Intel 8 thread / AMD 4 module CPUs to open up task manager / resource manager and alt tab mid game to check out your CPU usage, and see what the usage spread is like. That would settle quite a bit of the guesswork in the scaling of additional cores. So ... Get testing, people!
In any case, games are becoming more and more GPU bound vs CPU bound. Especially with DX11 implementations. But yes, I vote we petition TPU to start doing CPU charts. lol
#357
Posted 18 June 2012 - 10:06 PM
Vulpesveritas, on 18 June 2012 - 06:12 PM, said:
And the NZXT switch 810 is more or less the perfect value water cooling case out there on the higher end cases. you can stick a 420mm radiator on top and a 240mm on bottom. That will cool almost any setup.
And for the price of a 932, there's this from Rosewill; http://www.newegg.co...N82E16811147157
Bigger and even more airflow.
Honestly I've had nothing but bad experiences with Rosewill products in the past (shoddy fans, poor QC, low life expectancy...) stopped buying their products when a friend bought a Rosewill PSU and it fried his system, he got an RMA for all the bits (thank god Newegg is so understanding) and tried again, it died in a month of the same thing... (luckily for him this time around only the PSU died, not anything else)
#358
Posted 18 June 2012 - 10:19 PM
stukinit, on 18 June 2012 - 10:06 PM, said:
Honestly I've had nothing but bad experiences with Rosewill products in the past (shoddy fans, poor QC, low life expectancy...) stopped buying their products when a friend bought a Rosewill PSU and it fried his system, he got an RMA for all the bits (thank god Newegg is so understanding) and tried again, it died in a month of the same thing... (luckily for him this time around only the PSU died, not anything else)
well, as far as PSUs, depending on the model they're not all very good. The Hive series are generally okay, and the capstone series are rather top of the line, but the rest of their PSUs I would not recommend.
Fan wise, you seem to have had bad luck. Their reviews are generally good, except if you go with any cheapo sleeve bearing. I can say the same recently about CoolerMaster fans having horrible QC, low life expectancy, and coming shoddy.
As far as the case... it's a case. Seriously. Not much you can do horribly wrong, and the Thor V2 has normally good reviews across the board.
#359
Posted 18 June 2012 - 10:25 PM
Vulpesveritas, on 18 June 2012 - 10:19 PM, said:
Fan wise, you seem to have had bad luck. Their reviews are generally good, except if you go with any cheapo sleeve bearing. I can say the same recently about CoolerMaster fans having horrible QC, low life expectancy, and coming shoddy.
As far as the case... it's a case. Seriously. Not much you can do horribly wrong, and the Thor V2 has normally good reviews across the board.
Well, I cede my point good sir.
Honestly I'm just trying to defend my last shreds of dignity, owning a 932 and all
(Although the PSU thing has soured their rep with me as far as their power supplies go, and I generally prefer Scythe/Zalman fans to any other manufacturer)
#360
Posted 18 June 2012 - 10:28 PM
WIthin a month the lights and USB hub no longer worked.
lol
But lol. Of course. what I recommend as far as power supplies go are all over here; http://mwomercs.com/...r-supply-guide/
Fan wise, I'm a GeLID / NZXT guy myself.
4 user(s) are reading this topic
0 members, 4 guests, 0 anonymous users
















