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Thread : Critic Gaming Build Take II
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Hello everyone!
Message edited by Nytmare on 08-13-2008 at 10:18:00 PM |
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"Never dance with a ghost in silk sheets"
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This HDD. $10 more and 140 gb extra memory. For those that don't want to do the math. that is 7 cents a gig to move up.
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Do not eat the styrofoam
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Glad to hear your first build is doing well |
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Looks good, I would go with the Duo over the Quad. Yea i think 2 4870x2 would be overkill right now.
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1000HX is a great PSU. It has two rails of 40A each. That might complicate things a bit - you need to distribute things right so that each rail gets a video card and about half of the rest, or you'll end up overloading one rail. Either do that, or get a single rail PSU with 80A like the Silverstone OP1000-E.
Message edited by Nytmare on 08-13-2008 at 11:53:37 PM |
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Do not eat the styrofoam
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Don't worry about single rail/multiple rails. PC Power & Cooling says single rail is best, Enermax says otherwise, both are very respected. Western Digital says the 32MB vs 16MB is just not worth the extra cost because the speed improvement is negligible. It's hard to verify for yourself because you can't find two completely identical disks that differ only in the amount of cache, but they created such disks and measured and that's what they decided. If you don't believe them buy Seagate disks, they are very good too and even have longer warranties. Why it's better to have different burners: 1. movies from the public library or BlockBuster, with scratches - some times they work on one of my drives but not on the other. No general rule - I've had disks that worked only on one and disks that worked only on the other. 2. games with tough protection schemes - sometimes they refuse to work on certain drives (e.g. Asus). 3. two CDs with different software are better than two CDs with the same software. 4. if a burner is very good at ripping audio or at ripping video or at burning audio CDs or at burning data DVDs, you can discover which does what better and use the right one. No drive is perfect at everything. 5. If you really want to verify a disk you've burned, you can write it with one drive and read it with the other. Better test than reusing the same drive. 6. If you buy a 100-disk spindle and the disks work at 4x on one drive and 16x on the other, you're better off than with two drives both at 4x. I've seen this for example with Verbatim disks (they work fine at 16x on my Plextor, but burning at 16x on my LG fail with them. The LG is fine otherwise - it burns at 16x all right on Memorex or Phillips media.) OK, I can't come up with 10 reasons, I knew that was too much.
Message edited by aevm on 08-14-2008 at 04:20:21 PM |
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THX again to all that helped in the build Message edited by Nytmare on 10-10-2008 at 10:49:38 PM |
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Placement of the HSF is kind of iffy. Looks like you're blowing hot air at your gpus. I'm not sure, but I think it might be to your benefit to point the HSF out the back of the case.
Message edited by nvgtrwiggles on 10-11-2008 at 05:41:12 AM |
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The HSF sucks air onto the heatsink not away, so there is no hot air being blown onto GPU's.
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Hmm, learn something new every day. I always thought to have the fan pull the heat away from the heatsink towards one of the exhausts. Weird. |
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TIME TO UPGRADE... to vista (shudders)
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is that HUGE thing a fan? it looks like you glued another mobo onto youre first one! or is that just a trick of light lol |
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