Originally posted by -Deborah-
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OT: Technology and Geek Stuff Thread
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Originally posted by -Deborah- View PostThanks for the bump. I wondered why Mark was posting his PC problems in the Forum Admin thread!
Your new machine sounds pretty darn awesome.
Sorry.
Nice Machine, Top.
What did it cost to build it?I long for a Lions team that is consistently competitive.
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Originally posted by Malto Marko View PostBecause I was struck by a case of the stupids.
Sorry.
Nice Machine, Top.
What did it cost to build it?
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How much heat does it add to the room? My Nephew ran a custom built screamer and the damn thing raised his room temp 10 degrees if he had the door shut.Benny Blades~"If you break down this team man for man, we have talent to compare with any team."
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Originally posted by Tony G View PostHow much heat does it add to the room? My Nephew ran a custom built screamer and the damn thing raised his room temp 10 degrees if he had the door shut.
Playing a game that also pushes the CPU a bit (like BF3 MP) would be about 2x the power usage of Xbox (130W for CPU 200W for the Vid card).
That in a smallish room would probably heat it up to 80ish within 4 hours of continuous gaming. That isn't a problem for me I don't go on long gaming binges that often.
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Originally posted by Malto Marko View PostWow!
That is a real bargain for such a powerful machine.
The 3TB drive was actually pretty funny. Seagate has two locations where drives are made. Thialand and China. The Chinese drives have hit nearly last years pree flood costs. The Thialand ones have been more reliable, and faster, but still have a decently high cost post flood. I found out that with their external drives, they don't change prices based on what drive they put in there. So I went to best buy found an external drive with a made in Thialand upc, and proceded to buy it for less the Newegg was selling the Chinese internal drive OEM style and tore it open to get a cost effective but reliable storage drive.
2 Tips for high performance systems. 1.) Always build them yourselves, these are the systems that Manufacturers get the most margin on. 2.) If going all out. Never go truly all out. In just about every way my system is with 95% of the performance of a system costing 1k more. Always get the step down from the top. Its already being a bit wasteful, no reason to go straight to burning money. Technically their is a third one. 3.) This only applies to home computers. It's not worth it for work. Get it from Dell.
Edit: This got me thinking. What would it be without making any changes really to capacity (or adding a second video card) what would it have been if I went that next step up and got the best of everything. It ended up being 3.5k. Chasing that dragon isn't worth it.Last edited by Topweasel; May 1, 2012, 05:35 PM.
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At the pace of change with technology, you're absolutely right Top - pretty much the motto I live by. Your build reminds me of mine last winter, we have similar components. I almost went with water cooling but decided against it as the extra cost wasn't going to net me that much more cooling. One thing I've found with SSD's - update their firmware.
Noticed HDD prices have finally come back down - just in time for me to get more 2 TB drives to upgrade my second array.Got Kneecaps?
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Originally posted by Coop View PostAt the pace of change with technology, you're absolutely right Top - pretty much the motto I live by. Your build reminds me of mine last winter, we have similar components. I almost went with water cooling but decided against it as the extra cost wasn't going to net me that much more cooling. One thing I've found with SSD's - update their firmware.
Noticed HDD prices have finally come back down - just in time for me to get more 2 TB drives to upgrade my second array.
Other advantage being compatibility. I don't have to worry about sink size, I don't have to worry about whether the first 16x slot is the first or second expansion slot because the sink can get in the way. Nope now I can make sure if I want to double up on memory, or mess with any connectors on the top half of the motherboard I don't need to remove the HSF. Most of this is because I tend to go overboard on CPU cooling.
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you can never have enough fans - totally agree, as those hex core chips are NOT cheap. are you putting VMWare on that box?
Regarding the cooler - definitely an often overlooked "oops" is when the damn thing is so big that it conflicts with add on cards, Ram, or too big for the case.Got Kneecaps?
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Originally posted by Coop View Postyou can never have enough fans - totally agree, as those hex core chips are NOT cheap. are you putting VMWare on that box?
Regarding the cooler - definitely an often overlooked "oops" is when the damn thing is so big that it conflicts with add on cards, Ram, or too big for the case.
As for the Cooler. Yeah, I see a lot of people recommending the NH D-14. Looking it over I found out that the fan clips can hit the GPU if the GPU was in the first expansion slots. I find a lot of Asus and Gigabyte boards use a 1x slot there and the 16x in the next one. But since I didn't pick-out the board (lesson learned be more picky about parts on a Christmas list) The first 16x is at the top. It was at that point that I decided, its an expensive CPU, an extra $40, to avoid all compatibility issues, was a no brainer. Then I got geeked about being able to keep the ambient temp in the case at room temp buy having all the CPU heat and at the time GPU heat going immediately out of the case.Last edited by Topweasel; May 2, 2012, 10:25 AM.
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Originally posted by Malto Marko View PostYa, you just have to remember to bolt it on before installing the motherboard.:-D
But yeah LGA1156, 1366, and 1155, the standard coolers and their plastic clips and crappy brackets are pretty annoying.
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