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kevinisbeast707

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Posts posted by kevinisbeast707

  1. Depends what you want it to do. If you're going to be using it for rendering or CPU heavy workloads then no it will throttle for sure. If you're just gaming then it will probably be fine. I've set mine to the 65w tdp profile and enabled pbo and curve optimizer while using a wraith spire cooler and it was able to keep it boosting to about 4.7 in game. However if you're only going to be gaming with it maybe just get a 5600x. A 5800x could be a good choice if you're going to be doing streaming or recording using the amd encoder on the GPU. 

  2. I have a dark rock TF2 on my 5900x and it cools it perfectly well. The only time it doesn't quite cool it is when I have an all core load with pbo set to 200w. I'm not entirely sure if you can get to the screws through both fans but it's is fairly easy to mount and taking the cooler off doesn't remove the mounting mechanism. 

  3. 9 minutes ago, GOJIRA229 said:

    Wouldn’t you want to spend less money on the interface and more in the mic?

    Not necessarily. The mic should probably be the first thing that you upgrade when you get the money but the xm8500 is an excellent microphone for the price. I'll link you a video where you can listen to the audio quality of the microphone.

    One thing to note is that this is a dynamic microphone so it will better cancel out background noise but if you're not speaking directly into it you will also be very quiet. If you want a microphone that is better at picking you up from farther away/at other angles then I can try to find a condenser mic in your price range.

  4. Depending on whether or not you already have a microphone stand or not then this is the combo that I use and I'm pretty happy with it. I have a Behringer xm8500 hooked up to a Focusrite scarlett solo gen3. I also have a cloudlifter in between these two to raise my gain a bit but that's not necessary. I'll also link the xlr cables I use and a cheap microphone desk mount if you need one.

     

    Focusrite scarlett solo gen 3:

    https://www.amazon.com/dp/B07QR6Z1JB/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_fabc_G241YJWP3E29ENC4AQ9Q?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1

     

    Behringer xm8500:

    https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0002KZAKS/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_fabc_1FN4PER898FPMYD3TRS8

     

    Xlr cables:

    https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01JY29Z5A/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_fabc_SWJTMT8DZYE3B2ZFP7BD?psc=1

     

    Foam pop filter:

    https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0006NMUK4/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_fabc_E6EC4SDKN20FX0WZBY78?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1

     

    Microphone desk mount:

    https://www.amazon.com/dp/B00DY1F2CS/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_fabc_RWN995Y560305NP71YGX

     

    Shock mount:

    https://www.amazon.com/dp/B083Q5T15W/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_fabc_7TMR9GKFXNVGGQZ929C8?_encoding=UTF8&psc=1

     

    Getting everything definitely goes over your budget but you can always leave out the stand and shock mount if you already have those or if you need them you can use something like this https://www.amazon.com/dp/B01K5WLJ6Q/ref=cm_sw_r_cp_apa_fabc_H0VTN1NPHFPKSJPY3MQ6() and then you'd save money on both the adc and the xlr cable.

     

    Cheers!

  5. Hmmmm. I'm probably going to have to say that for me it's a solar charging battery bank that I got for my birthday from my girlfriends parents. It would take so long to recharge it using just solar that it isn't worth it to do so, but since it's so bright in my room during the day, I can just leave it on my desk and then I never have to worry about it losing charge as it's constantly being topped off.

  6. Just now, leyo96 said:

    https://blog.jdslabs.com/2019/11/jds-labs-element-ii-official-release-benchmarks/

     

    This is the best thing that I've found but I really don't understand a lot of the performance comparison. The Dac between the two, the usb controller it's different and the amp is more powerful on the 2. Other than that I'm too noob to understand

    So, a very simplified version is that, for the most part, anything that has a signal to noise ratio of over 96db will be good enough to play back everything that a 16 bit music file has to offer. This is "cd quality" and is probably what you should be aiming for. 24 bit is really useful for if you want to use digital volume control like the windows volume to control the output volume since you won't lose data until a very low volume. 

     

    Crosstalk is more or less the amount of noise that will leak from one channel of the headphone to the other unintentionally. -67db is a pretty fine number and while a lower db is always preferred, most "cheaper" amps are around this figure. The schiit mangi 3/+/heresy is only "-70db or less".

     

    all of the other measurements are over -100db which is perfect and exactly what you're looking for. After 100db it becomes very difficult to discern a difference in distortion and noise artifacts with the types of headphones that you and I are using for listening. After 120db the differences are basically inaudible to the human ear.

     

    Output impedance determines both the volume output and the frequency response you'll get out of your headphones. in general lower is better and you want to have something like an 8 to 1 or a 10 to 1 ratio between the impedance of your headhones and the output impedance of your amplifier. So for the k712 at 62 ohms, you'd want an amplifier that has an output impedance of  less than 6-7 ohms. Anything higher than this will change the sound signature of them and make them slightly quieter. One of the benefits of having a higher output impedance is that when you use iems that have a very low impedance and are very sensitive, you can still  use the same amplifier since the relatively higher output impedance of the amplifier will reduce the loudness of the iems. 

     

    As for power, I don't know that I've run into any reason to go above 1 watt of power output. I have the Sennheiser hd6xx and with my magni 3 I have never had to take it out of low gain and the volume dial is usually near or below the 8 o'clock position.

  7. 18 minutes ago, leyo96 said:

    Yeah I think the Element 1 is starting to be my best option. Do you know how much worse it is compared to the element 2? I couldn't find many comparisons

    Thanks

    I haven't been able to find any direct comparisons either. However I was able to find JDS's spec sheet for the original one and if they were as honest back then as they are now then it looks like it will still be competitive today.

     

    The element 1: https://blog.jdslabs.com/2015/06/introducing-the-element-by-jds-labs/

     

    The element 2: https://jdslabs.com/product/element-ii/

     

    There are some good comments on this thread about the v1 vs v2: https://blog.jdslabs.com/2019/11/jds-labs-element-ii-official-release-benchmarks/

  8. 12 hours ago, leyo96 said:

    Edit to my list: Added xDuoo TA-01B and JDS Labs Element 1, clarified that the Topping DX3 pro is v2

    The element 1 looks like a really good deal but it doesn't have optical input. The topping dx3 pro v2 is a great combo unit as well but what worries me is that they boosted the output impedance from the v1 so it's now 10 ohms. From looking at the phase measurements of the k712, it looks like that may make it sharp.

  9. 8 hours ago, leyo96 said:

    I'd like to have optical in if in a future I'll get a console (I play only on pc rn) but I'm not spending way more just for that, if it's a small price different I'd go with the optical option.

    The problem with Drop is that you have to wait for the drop shipping for some items (usually like a month after the end of the drop) and then 3-6 weeks to ship to europe. It's way too much time!

    The objective 2 amp is in stock only with medium gain, standard gain is out of stock so is a no.

    Grace sdac ships June 12 so nope.

    So what you suggest is a topping D10 + jds Atom= 109 + 123 (or 172) + 20 = 252€ if lucky or 301€ if unlucky, but the most probable outcome (customs)

     

    Ah that's unfortunate. And yes that is a  pretty good combo. But if you have to have optical in then it might be worth it to go for the d30 and wait or to see if the modi 3 will come back in stock.

  10. Do you need optical in? If not then the Topping d10 is a good dac otherwise. The JDS labs atom is incredible and I would probably go with that, a magni heresy, or an objective 2. I personally use the Schiit modi/magni 3 stack and, while I find that the magni 3 actually has too much power, the dac is amazing. I don't know how pricing would work out for you but you could also always try something from Massdrop. They have their objective 2 amp and grace sdac which is also a very good combination that, at least in the states, is cheaper than a schiit stack. 

  11. If you never want to overclock then the 3600x could be worth it. If you think you might upgrade to something better within the next year or so, feel like you might overclock the processor yourself, or are running a gpu lesser than probably an rtx 2060 super then the 3600 could be more worth it. The way Linus does it is to take the difference in prices between what your entire computer setup would be with and without the more expensive chip and see if the percentage difference is similar to how much more percentage wise you'd be spending extra.

     

    ie: let's say that your entire setup would cost $600 with the 3600 and $630 with the 3600x. So you would take $630/$600=1.05 which means that in this instance the 3600x would make your build 5 percent more expensive overall. Now you take the games or apps that you'd like to use and try to find some benchmarks for them. If in this example it performs more than 5 percent better in games that you play then it is worth it to get the 3600x. If it is under 5 percent then you are paying for diminishing returns and it is then up to you if the smaller increase in performance for the price is worth it.

  12. On 8/11/2019 at 6:38 PM, knoyue said:

    I would love to do a custom loop, but without any experience doing any intricate water-cooling I'm afraid I'll bust my motherboard with leakage. It's a shame that there are no easy water-cooling aio methods for people like me out in the pc part marketplace. I was also looking at the corsair H115i platinum that claim it fits a TR4 socket. Whats your input on that? 

    Just to put in my two cents as someone with a clc tr4 build, the only time I've ever had a leak in any of my clc builds had been when I cross threaded a fitting into an ek acrylic block but I immediately felt the cross threading and I decided to try it out anyways after threading it correctly. Long story short I ended up getting a copper/nickle block top and I've never had any issues in this department since with soft tubing.

  13. On 6/28/2019 at 5:44 AM, Hexaae said:

    Laptop ASUS GL703GS (BIOS 309)
    CPU i7-8750H (iGPU disabled)
    GTX 1070 8GB (vbios 86.04.7c.00.24, Samsung VRAM)
    Windows 10 Pro 1903
    Desktop res: 1080p (1920x1080)
    Screen mode: 144Hz + g-sync
    Hard disks: NVMe Samsung, SSD Crucial
    USB Blu-Ray 4K drive: Verbatim 43888 (Pioneer BDR-UD04)

     

    What I've learned since I started many months ago with repaste/undervolting (UV) i7-8750H:

    1) UV less than -150mV or so for CACHE may seem stable but it only depends on the games you play: play something really demanding like Rise of the Tomb Rider, Forza Horizon 4, Lords of the Fallen at Ultra 90+fps and you'll see some freezes with audio in loop. Play other 30 games and it seems perfectly stable, yes, including benchmark tools.

    SAFE place is -125mV CACHE for i7-8750H, CORE can be -145mV or more (but too much will reduce max frequency 3999-4100 to 3500).

    2) some lucky users reporting incredibly low temps like 70-80°C when you play AAA titles at 90fps+ may have a faulty mobo with underpower issue. This explains the very low temps. Sad but true, from my direct experience with ASUS GL703GS and a friend of mine with ASUS GL704GW, we both initially got incredibly low temps so were super-excited… but… after a while we started to see problems: in my case USB ports had not enough power sometimes and caused random external faaast drives disconnections (SSD 550GB/s connected through USB 3.1 SS) and very rare freezes + sound in loop even with stock clocks and no UV. The friend of mine after 3 months got the PC completely DEAD: from night to day power button did nothing, with or without AC PSU. In both cases ASUS RMA replaced main board and they returned with higher temps but totally stable in any circumstances.

    So beware if your gaming laptop has suspiciously good temps (about -10°C) at default clock without UV compared to commonly reported temps (up to 96°C under heavy load without UV for the 8750H)….

     

    Just my two cents after 6 months with these beefy new gaming laptops….

    That has about summed up my experience as well. With my G7 I never had usb power delivery issues but I also didn't observe a large temperature difference since the G7 was just taking that extra thermal headroom and boosting to the limits of that default voltage curves power limit. What I have come to respect in the months since then is that Rise of The Tomb Raider is brutal on hardware and incredibly good at finding weaknesses in overclocks. On my desktop I have been able to play every other game I own for hours and hours on end with a gpu overclock on a 2080 at +160Mhz but the moment I try to play ROTTR I have to drop the clock back to +140 otherwise it crashes every time. Does the same for cpu overclocks though for memory I find cinebench does a fine job for generally finding really bad overclocks and timings. 

  14. Honestly you'd probably still be fine going with something like Noctua's U12. The d15 will perform better and be quieter tho. Saving money with a Coolermaster hyper 212 silence which is black and pretty quiet and is quite a bit cheaper.

  15. On 5/18/2019 at 12:27 PM, CHRISTIANT6 said:

    so get corsair aio of nzxt, as im using nzxt case?

    I'd honestly follow @LukeSavenije 's advice on part selection. You're going to be getting a lot of benefit from dropping down to a 2700 instead of the x variant and then opting for a Radeon VII or rtx 2080. Also of note is that nzxt's h500 sucks for airflow which will impact your gpu in your case pretty harshly. His system layout for you is much more balanced. If unfortunately you have already bought your case then you're going to want to use nzxt if you already have some of their rgb stuff. Otherwise corsair is better.

     

    Link to gamers Nexus nzxt h500 review: 

     

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