|
What got my attention was this: Because there the retention clips for DIMM1 and DIMM2 are clearly open. I can't tell if you've pushed them closed in the second image.
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 12:03 |
|
|
# ? Jun 9, 2024 21:14 |
|
VulgarandStupid posted:I guess backplates weren’t a thing when that motherboard was made. I suppose this is it. The whole angled part of the clip is in the way so the only solution I can see would be to remove the clip, and that doesn't seem like a brilliant idea. Any suggestions on a replacement motherboard/CPU in this situation? The recommendation earlier was only to switch out the GPU, but here we are.
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 12:16 |
|
I believe you could remove the backplate without compromising the structure of the card - just don't unscrew the four screws on the corners of the GPU mounting - that's what holds the cooling assembly to the card. Just keep it and the screws handy should you ever have to RMA it.
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 12:29 |
|
With ram I am needing to buy 32gb for holding lighting source data while rendering. The actual speed of the ram is inconsequential because everything is CPU locked anyway and a few seconds here or there between passes is meaningless compared to the hour per pass. Is there a reason to buy a 32gb kit instead of 4 individual sticks of 8gb if I have 4 dim sockets, the price differential is about 120 dollars.
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 12:54 |
|
Byolante posted:With ram I am needing to buy 32gb for holding lighting source data while rendering. The actual speed of the ram is inconsequential because everything is CPU locked anyway and a few seconds here or there between passes is meaningless compared to the hour per pass. Is there a reason to buy a 32gb kit instead of 4 individual sticks of 8gb if I have 4 dim sockets, the price differential is about 120 dollars. Technically yes, a kit is guaranteed to work together, four individual sticks are not. In practice, as long as you buy them at the same time they're pretty much guaranteed to come from the same batch and as long as they're not hyper-binned 4500 RAM MT/s it'll almost certainly work. They will definitely work at JEDEC speeds (2400 MT/s) and will very probably work at their official speeds too, as long as that's something reasonable like 3000 or 3200. Paul MaudDib fucked around with this message at 13:00 on Dec 17, 2017 |
# ? Dec 17, 2017 12:57 |
|
Paul MaudDib posted:Technically yes, a kit is guaranteed to work together, four individual sticks are not. I am just looking at the cheapest ram I can find on the motherboard's QVL list. So it will be either 2133 or 2400
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 13:05 |
|
Byolante posted:I am just looking at the cheapest ram I can find on the motherboard's QVL list. So it will be either 2133 or 2400 Yeah, no sweat. Buy the 4 sticks rather than the kit.
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 13:37 |
|
Impromptu Flip posted:I suppose this is it. The whole angled part of the clip is in the way so the only solution I can see would be to remove the clip, and that doesn't seem like a brilliant idea. Backplate removal could work. Other options would be to remove the PSU and put it outside the case to free up space around the lower PCIe x16 slot and put the GPU in there. Or buy a new case with more space at the lower edge of motherboard.
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 13:42 |
|
I need to spruce up my gaming pc with a new video card (it has a GeForce 560ti right now so it’s old). I’ve been out of the loop, is the 1060 6gb worth buying right now? Like are there new cards on the horizon or does it just not matter? I ask because I want to pick up a zowie 144hz monitor and I need a new card obviously for dvi-d.
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 14:06 |
|
Social Animal posted:I need to spruce up my gaming pc with a new video card (it has a GeForce 560ti right now so it’s old). I’ve been out of the loop, is the 1060 6gb worth buying right now? Like are there new cards on the horizon or does it just not matter? nVidia generally releases the mid-range cards in a new GPU architecture ~6-9 months after the launch of the x70/x80, because if they released the x60 at the same time, it'd eat into their profits from the gotta-have-it end users who'd buy on impulse (it's also easier for the boardmakers if there are only two chips they need to bin), and they have to make it a sizable waiting period because if they made it ~3 months, people would just wait, instead of let their money eat a hole in their pocket. A 6GB 1060 is still a damned good card. You might want to consider waiting on the monitor, though - the Dell 27" 1440p G-Sync went on sale for $349 a few weeks back, and your Zowie might be 144Hz, but it's still TN and doesn't have G-Sync. It's entirely possible the 27" Dell goes back on sale in the post-Christmas/pre-New Year's sale period.
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 14:16 |
|
Saukkis posted:Backplate removal could work. Other options would be to remove the PSU and put it outside the case to free up space around the lower PCIe x16 slot and put the GPU in there. Or buy a new case with more space at the lower edge of motherboard. I have a Fractal Design case which I really like and I'd rather not change it. I'll pick up some needle nose pliers and screwdrivers and try taking off the backplate as you and Headline suggest. I had a look around online and it seems EVGA are perfectly with doing it. This is an annoying obstacle. Also it turns out dual channel mode requires using DIMM2 & DIMM4. The more you know.
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 14:31 |
|
Impromptu Flip posted:On recommendation here I bought an EVGA GTX 1070. It doesn't fit my motherboard - the GPU sits on top of the edge of the RAM levers. Man, that's obnoxious. I'm sorry, I didn't know certain mATX motherboards could trip you up like that. It's only three years old too! It's pretty bizarre that they have such small clearances. Hope you can find a way to make it work.
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 15:01 |
|
BIG HEADLINE posted:nVidia generally releases the mid-range cards in a new GPU architecture ~6-9 months after the launch of the x70/x80, because if they released the x60 at the same time, it'd eat into their profits from the gotta-have-it end users who'd buy on impulse (it's also easier for the boardmakers if there are only two chips they need to bin), and they have to make it a sizable waiting period because if they made it ~3 months, people would just wait, instead of let their money eat a hole in their pocket. Thanks for the advice. What exactly is the difference between TN and G-Sync? Major upgrade?
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 15:19 |
|
I'm looking for some advice on upgrading my current computer. I use/will use this PC for gaming, normal office/internet work, Adobe Creative Suite CS6, and GameMaker Studio. I do not do much video editing or photography work. The machine itself was bought December 2012, so it's fairly old. Looking at the parts it's made of tho, it seems I can get a substantial upgrade in gaming by just changing the GPU. I don't find the computer slow for any of the other stuff I'm using it, so I'm trying to find the most amount of upgrade for the least amount of money/changing of parts. I should add that I don't overclock at all. I currently use an iMac 27" 2009 as external display (2560x1440@60Hz), but plan to upgrade this to a 34-38" UltraWide soon (Alienware, or one of the new Asus/Acer with 200Hz, or the Acer 38" XR382CQK if gaming takes a back seat to productivity). The current rig is: Motherboard - MSI Z77A-GD55, Socket-1155 Processor - Intel Core i7-3770 (Using it with its stock fan) GPU - Sapphire Radeon HD 7970 3GB GDDR5 RAM - 16 GB (4x4gb) Kingston DDR3 HyperX 1600MHx PSU - XFX ProSeries Core Edition 550W HDD - Crucial M4 SSD 2.5" 256GB Case - NZXT H2 Midi Tower OS - Win 10 Home What I'm uncertain about is: 1. Can I just buy and replace the Radeon HD7970 with a GeForce 1080 and everything will work fine? (Upgrading the MoBO BIOS firmware tho) 2. Will the 550w PSU have enough power to run the computer as it is, but with a new GPU like the 1080? 3. Is buying the 1080 overkill compared to a 1070 or 1070TI? The price difference seems to be not that much between a 1070TI and 1080, and there are som options to buy a used 1080 instead of a brand new 1070TI etc. 4. Should I look into a better fan for the i7 3770 even if I'm not overclocking it? Thank you in advance for help! P.S. I should add I'm looking very hard on a used MSI GeForce GTX 1080 Gaming X that will cost some less than a new MSI GeForce GTX 1070 Ti Gaming. iSimian fucked around with this message at 15:28 on Dec 17, 2017 |
# ? Dec 17, 2017 15:22 |
|
Social Animal posted:Thanks for the advice. What exactly is the difference between TN and G-Sync? Major upgrade? TN is a type of LCD monitor panel technology. It's cheap and it reacts quickly to changes, so it's been common in high refresh rate gaming monitors for a long time. There are downsides, though - TN panels usually have godawful viewing angles and "gray out" if you're looking at the monitor from anywhere that isn't perfectly straight ahead, and they tend to have poor color reproduction. The monitor thread will tell you to never buy TN and instead always look for the more expensive IPS technology, which has none of TN's downsides (it does have its own caveats though, but they're generally far less obnoxious than those of a TN panel). I'm inclined to agree; TN panels are awful and once you've tasted IPS you will not want to go back. G-sync is nVidia's variable refresh rate technology. With G-sync the monitor doesn't have to be locked to a fixed refresh rate but can instead be locked to the game's actual rendering rate, so you never get any tearing. AMD has its own competing technology called FreeSync. The problem with G-sync is that it requires some extra stuff in the monitor which nVidia charges a hefty premium for and so a monitor with G-sync tends to be $150-200 more expensive than an equivalent one without G-sync.
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 15:29 |
|
TheFluff posted:Man, that's obnoxious. I'm sorry, I didn't know certain mATX motherboards could trip you up like that. It's only three years old too! It's pretty bizarre that they have such small clearances. Hope you can find a way to make it work. No worries. This isn't the kind of thing you can really anticipate - I appreciate your advice
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 15:44 |
|
total amount of ram being equal, is there a difference in performance between number of sticks?
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 16:07 |
|
1 stick is single channel, 2 sticks are dual channel. You will get better numbers in your benchmark of choice running dual channel.
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 16:10 |
|
I ordered that $60 8700k through tiger direct. Just says "pending review". We'll see! Been wanting to build an 8400 system, so this would be a nice start.
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 16:38 |
|
iSimian posted:I'm looking for some advice on upgrading my current computer. I use/will use this PC for gaming, normal office/internet work, Adobe Creative Suite CS6, and GameMaker Studio. I do not do much video editing or photography work. 1. Yes - you'll want to uninstall the old AMD graphics driver though, of course 2. Yes 3. If you're planning 1440p ultrawide at high refresh rates, the 1080 is probably where you want to be. The 1070Ti is kinda pointless at the moment, it's a slightly worsened 1080 that's not cheap enough to motivate picking it over an actual 1080. 4. No real need for that if you're not overclocking, but it can make the computer a bit quieter. You may end up bottlenecked by the CPU in certain games, but it's probably not gonna be too bad - at least not yet. TheFluff fucked around with this message at 16:55 on Dec 17, 2017 |
# ? Dec 17, 2017 16:53 |
|
Will a 8400 bottleneck a 1080 ti or next gen volta gpus?
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 17:33 |
|
Otakufag posted:Will a 8400 bottleneck a 1080 ti or next gen volta gpus? That depends what resolution you're playing at but the general answer is yes, at 1440p it will moderately bottleneck and at 1080p it may bottleneck quite a bit.
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 17:37 |
|
Impromptu Flip posted:On recommendation here I bought an EVGA GTX 1070. It doesn't fit my motherboard - the GPU sits on top of the edge of the RAM levers. It's hard to tell from your pictures but could you potentially trim down the ram retention clips with a dremel or something? It's only plastic. You wouldn't want to trim into the area that actually holds the DIMM in place but if it's just the spot that's designed for you to press down with your thumb you could probably live without it. It would potentially be very difficult to move the clip down the road but really how often do you swap RAM?
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 18:41 |
|
TheFluff posted:1. Yes - you'll want to uninstall the old AMD graphics driver though, of course Thank you very much! These were all answers I hoped for!
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 22:03 |
|
so i'm looking at upgrading my existing machine rather than buying a new one. one of the features i need, thunderbolt, is not supported by my current motherboard. is it possible for me to take my existing cpu, a xeon 1231v3, out of my current motherboard and put it in a compatible motherboard that supports thunderbolt? like can you just transfer cpu like that?
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 22:20 |
|
Tiger direct cancelled my order without even an email.
|
# ? Dec 17, 2017 23:38 |
|
Abel Wingnut posted:so i'm looking at upgrading my existing machine rather than buying a new one. one of the features i need, thunderbolt, is not supported by my current motherboard. is it possible for me to take my existing cpu, a xeon 1231v3, out of my current motherboard and put it in a compatible motherboard that supports thunderbolt? like can you just transfer cpu like that? I'm a little out of my element with regards to a Xeon chip, but as long as the motherboard supports the CPU then from a CPU and MB standpoint yea, go ahead. I would probably recommend a fresh OS on a switch like that.
|
# ? Dec 18, 2017 04:16 |
|
Abel Wingnut posted:so i'm looking at upgrading my existing machine rather than buying a new one. one of the features i need, thunderbolt, is not supported by my current motherboard. is it possible for me to take my existing cpu, a xeon 1231v3, out of my current motherboard and put it in a compatible motherboard that supports thunderbolt? like can you just transfer cpu like that? You can geta PCIe Thunderbolt card. I'm not sure if LGA1150 motherboards are still available new.
|
# ? Dec 18, 2017 12:42 |
|
from what i’ve read, for a thunderbolt card to work with a motherboard, that motherboard needs built-in thunderbolt headers. mine, a h-97 gamer pro, does not
|
# ? Dec 18, 2017 14:05 |
|
Sorry, I've assumed all it needs is PCIe, should have done more research. With regards to your CPU: you can check motherboard compatibility list to make sure, but it looks ok. For example Gigabyte GA-Z97X-UD7 supports your CPU even with old BIOS version.
|
# ? Dec 18, 2017 14:30 |
|
Numinous posted:I'm a little out of my element with regards to a Xeon chip, but as long as the motherboard supports the CPU then from a CPU and MB standpoint yea, go ahead. I would probably recommend a fresh OS on a switch like that. The E3 chips like that are just i5/i7s with ECC, there's not much unusual to them. oliveoil posted:It's a Micro ATX case and it seems to have two 120mm fans: http://www.silverstonetek.com/product.php?pid=314&area=en Especially with a fan in the back you'd be golden, but even just with the two that come with that I would try a dual-fan card if it fits and see how you do. The main downside to the single-fan ones is that they can't get quite as cool/quiet in ideal conditions and can't just idle the fan when idling the card due to lack of passive cooling ability. It's not a big deal though, I got a single-fan (FE) model for my 1060 because I bought early and the others were out of stock. Haven't really regretted it.
|
# ? Dec 18, 2017 15:27 |
|
Quick question - between the MSI 1060 (this one) and the Gigabyte 1060 (this one), is there any clear winner? I've been told the MSI one is way better temp-wise (which I don't get because the other one has three fans instead of two), but the Gigabyte one is overall better due to faster clock speeds.
|
# ? Dec 18, 2017 16:46 |
|
Azran posted:Quick question - between the MSI 1060 (this one) and the Gigabyte 1060 (this one), is there any clear winner? I've been told the MSI one is way better temp-wise (which I don't get because the other one has three fans instead of two), but the Gigabyte one is overall better due to faster clock speeds. Better temperatures directly mean better performance for Pascal cards like the 1060, and MSI is a better brand. Go with the MSI.
|
# ? Dec 18, 2017 16:49 |
|
Are the Samsung SSD's still the go to? I think mine is glitching on me (3+ years old) causing some entirely random freeze-ups. On my third reformat and I am still getting the issue. Swapped mobo, PSU, and tested RAM for 8 hours. So... onto the hard drive... I think.
|
# ? Dec 18, 2017 16:50 |
|
Azran posted:Quick question - between the MSI 1060 (this one) and the Gigabyte 1060 (this one), is there any clear winner? I've been told the MSI one is way better temp-wise (which I don't get because the other one has three fans instead of two), but the Gigabyte one is overall better due to faster clock speeds.
|
# ? Dec 18, 2017 16:53 |
|
Alright, thanks!
|
# ? Dec 18, 2017 16:56 |
|
is an m.2 ssd worth the price? brief research tells me the huge jump in price doesn’t match the minimal jump in performance, but i might be missing something
|
# ? Dec 18, 2017 18:04 |
|
Abel Wingnut posted:is an m.2 ssd worth the price? brief research tells me the huge jump in price doesn’t match the minimal jump in performance, but i might be missing something It is a huge jump in performance for an nvme ssd (not all m.2 are nvme). However, the jump from HDD to SSD was so huge that most people have good enough performance from a SATA SSD and don't need NVME. If your main use case is gaming, it's worth noting that load times are often not bound by disk access once you have a decent SSD, but by decompressing assets and other initialization work
|
# ? Dec 18, 2017 18:12 |
|
VostokProgram posted:It is a huge jump in performance for an nvme ssd (not all m.2 are nvme). However, the jump from HDD to SSD was so huge that most people have good enough performance from a SATA SSD and don't need NVME. my use case is audio production/recording. so i can see it possibly being worth it.
|
# ? Dec 18, 2017 18:13 |
|
|
# ? Jun 9, 2024 21:14 |
|
So, I have an Dell Optiplex 960 minitower, and was gifted a GTX 1050ti mini graphics card. It doesn't quite fit, but I think it will if I take off the plastic face plate. Would that render it worthless?
|
# ? Dec 18, 2017 18:26 |