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Chronical93

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Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Payne Springs, TX

System

  • CPU
    Intel® Core™ i7-6700K 4.00GHZ 8MB Intel Smart Cache LGA1151 (Skylake)
  • Motherboard
    MSI Z170A Gaming M7 ATX
  • RAM
    (8GBx2) GSkill Ripjaws V DDR4/2800MHz Dual Channel Memory
  • GPU
    EVGA FTW Edition ACX 2.0 NVIDIA GeForce GTX 970 4GB GDDR5 PCIe 3.0 x16
  • Case
    Corsair Obsidian 750D
  • Storage
    400GB Intel® SSD 750 Series NVME PCIe SSD, (2TBx1) SATA-III 6.0Gb/s 64MB Cache 7200RPM HDD
  • PSU
    750 Watts - EVGA SuperNOVA 750 G1 80 PLUS Gold Power Supply
  • Cooling
    NZXT Kraken X61 280mm Liquid CPU Cooling System w/Copper Cold Plate, Maximum Airflow with 140mm Enermax TB Silence UCTB14 140mm Performance Cooling with Low Noise Profile Fan, Vigor iSURF II Hard Disk Drive Cooling System
  • Operating System
    Windows 7 Pro 64bit

Recent Profile Visitors

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  1. I don't think so as far as I can tell its for running programs on your computer when you're not actually at your computer. Heres a link if you want to research it more. https://www.vmware.com/support/developer/vix-api/vix16_reference/
  2. Yeah as long as you don't need it for anything.
  3. The VIX API helps you write scripts to automate virtual machine operations and run programs that manipulate files within guest operating systems. VIX programs run on many different systems and support management of vSphere, Workstation, Player, and Fusion. Bindings are provided for C, Perl, and COM (Visual Basic, VBscript, C#).
  4. Hmm, it might be the fact that your pulling with the rad. Another thing I've noticed on mine I had a push-pull setup but wasn't getting the temps I thought I would after doing some research I learned It's actually better to have them set to push as you want it to blow the heat away from the rad not towards. Also, check the rad and make sure there's no dust on it especially if your fans are pulling.
  5. Alright, well the last thing I can think of is do you have your fans on the radiator set to push and pull. If, so try putting them both to push you should get a temp drop.
  6. Well, in the video the only wrong method was using too little if you remember. But yeah I doubted you used too little just had to ask.
  7. Also how long have you had your water cooling unit your pump may be slowing down causing the overheating.
  8. When you're running Bo3 is your CPU under full load? Also, when you applied your thermal paste you didn't use to little did you?
  9. Another thing to try is to have your exhaust fans on top I've found this to help since heat rises. And you should probably have 4 intakes and 2 exhaust as your intakes are what really helps cool it especially when they're near what your trying to cool.
  10. Also, I don't know if you have seen the old post but you can go onto Bethesda.com and sign up for beta access to the DLC they plan on having playtesters on all consoles. Might be something to check out.
  11. How close is your GPU in relation to your CPU. Also have you cleared any dust that might be in your PC out.
  12. Try looking at this and see if it helps. It definitely seems like a windows 10 problem as multiple people are experiencing this. http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/windows-10-how-fix-slow-boot-issues-after-free-upgrade-1513700
  13. Why thank you star you've been such a huge help
  14. You can currently get fallout 4 for right under 30$ usd on amazon. This is for anyone who might have been waiting to get it when it went on sale. http://www.amazon.com/Fallout-4-PC/dp/B00YQ2MM2M/ref=sr_1_1_twi_gam_4?ie=UTF8&qid=1456759685&sr=8-1&keywords=fallout+4
  15. Have you recently upgraded to windows 10 or are you currently using it.
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