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Everything posted by Opencircuit74
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What's a good upgrade for a 2600 + 3070 Ti?
Opencircuit74 replied to Filingo's topic in New Builds and Planning
It's hard to say exactly how much better it would be, but the 5700x has a way better architecture, clock speeds, core count, etc. The GPU usage being low usually means something else is preventing it from being used all the way, which looks to be the CPU in this case. -
What's a good upgrade for a 2600 + 3070 Ti?
Opencircuit74 replied to Filingo's topic in New Builds and Planning
The 3070 Ti has some great performance, you're right in suggesting the CPU upgrade first. The RAM could be another potential upgrade after the CPU, depending on what he has installed, but he'd see a big improvement with the newer chip. -
Yes, Windows 11 won't support the 7th gen CPUs, but the X299 motherboards that are used with them will. I just picked up a 7900X from that seller, but can easily upgrade to a 9900X in four years when the Windows 10 support expires. I doubt any malicious activity was going on, as one would expect the price of older parts to drop as they go EOL.
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Show off your old and retro computer parts
Opencircuit74 replied to TheTechnerd's topic in General Discussion
Found this guy a while back. It still works, surprisingly, and those two GPUs get toasty just sitting there. I can't imagine how hot this thing gets under load. -
Pc is constantly turning on and off after OC
Opencircuit74 replied to Yeurick's topic in CPUs, Motherboards, and Memory
Try resetting the CMOS on your motherboard, if there's something up with the BIOS that should fix it. -
What would the performance jump be to a gt 710
Opencircuit74 replied to Rylyguy's topic in Graphics Cards
The performance increase you might get from going to a 710 is negligible. I'd save some money for a better card. -
I had two system fans pointed at the heatsink, as I didn't want to wear out the OG fan from folding 24/7.
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I've had a PNY RTX 2060 in a folding machine for the longest time, and I had disconnected the fan to expose the bare heatsink and put a different one there. Before I did that, there were no problems with the card and the fan control worked fine on my computer. Now, I have returned the 2060's fan and put it back into my computer, but MSI afterburner won't control the fan speed whatsoever. I believe the controller/connector isn't broken, as the fan runs at normal speeds without a driver or before the driver is loaded in windows. I've run DDU on my old driver and installed the latest one, but I haven't noticed any change in the fan speed. Help would be appreciated.
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Is there a thing such as Too much power can kill my board?
Opencircuit74 replied to Feyza's topic in Power Supplies
Yeah, it's a lot of soldering. I looked into it for a while, and the work involved is ridiculous. You'd have to get a USB 3.0 to 2.0 header (or just solder the wires directly, but again, more work), cut the dell front panel wire near the buttons, cut the dell power switch near the buttons, cut the acer audio cable near the connector, cut one of the acer USB cables near the connector, and cut the acer power switch near the connector. You'd then have to attach one of the acer USB headers (with the connector still attached) to the USB adapter, and plug that into the dell motherboard. Then, you'd have to identify the USB part of the dell front panel wire and solder the wires to the acer USB that you cut, do the same with the audio, and the same again with the power switch. If you're really creative, you might also get the HDD LED to work, but that's generally unnecessary. That's a lot of work, and a lot of room to go wrong. I would just pick up a secondhand motherboard that supports that CPU and use the standard connectors on that. Usually the boards made by intel or an OEM (such as HP, but make sure there are standard USB and audio connectors) are cheapest. -
Is there a thing such as Too much power can kill my board?
Opencircuit74 replied to Feyza's topic in Power Supplies
Nonstandard front panel connectors are going to ruin your day, you won't have any I/O or even the ability to turn it on if you just throw the optiplex motherboard in that case with no modifications. -
Instead of that SSD I would get something larger like the Crucial P1, but overall that looks pretty good.
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cpu 3700x Overclock
Opencircuit74 replied to UnoReverseCard's topic in CPUs, Motherboards, and Memory
95 is really hot for a CPU, especially long-term. I wouldn't keep that overclock without a better cooler. -
Is there a thing such as Too much power can kill my board?
Opencircuit74 replied to Feyza's topic in Power Supplies
In regard to the power supply, the wattage its maximum capacity, not what it will output at all times. For example, I have an 850W power supply, but may only use 400W while gaming. Your 300W power supply will not fry this computer (given decent quality, not mustard cables and and a silver box). The socket for this motherboard should have the same spacing as a regular lga115x, but if you wanted to replace the cooler the entire motherboard would have to taken out and the backplate that allows the stock cooler to be screwed in removed. In essence, it's able to be done. There lies a larger issue, however, and that is with the motherboard design itself. Because this is a proprietary design, Dell has taken some liberties with the mounting and front panel connectors. The board will not have any I/O plate and will not be able to interface* with any case you install it, as the connector is one monolith instead of the separate, standard ones. This could be fixed with serious determination and decent soldering skills, but you're basically stuck with that case. * Snippet of technical guidebook FP connector: -
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help Upgrade advice needed please
Opencircuit74 replied to Keegan_S24's topic in New Builds and Planning
I guess the main question is what is your budget? -
Mine would be the Dell XPS 730 H2C ceramic liquid cooler. I don't have performance numbers on hand (10 year old system), but it was exceptional in that it incorporated thermal electric coolers and liquid cooled both the chipset and the CPU. Mind the watermark, but here's a good idea as to what it looked like: (The leftmost radiator is just a simple rad, but the middle one is where 4 TECs lie.)
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The 1660 Ti is slightly faster (2-5FPS) than the 1660 Super, which is relatively insignificant and can probably be made up with a slight overclock. I would go for the super.
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X570 chipset fans... necessary?
Opencircuit74 replied to CostcoSamples's topic in CPUs, Motherboards, and Memory
The X570 chipset uses around 7.5W, significantly more than is usual (>2x X470's 2.9W), which means a larger heatsink (or a smaller one with a fan) had to be used. You could unplug it and be fine, but the heatsink isn't designed to dissipate that much power passively, possibly causing damage to the board. TL;DR: Don't unplug it. -
You don't even have to do that. Per the website, it's a 257Wh battery, but the efficiency graph shows it becomes extremely inefficient as the power usage approaches 0, which means you will get very few charges from this, if you wish to charge your phone while the UPS is not plugged in.
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The Volt-Amp (VA) is not a measure of battery capacity, but rather a measure of power output. 1500VA is mathematically identical to 1500W (P=VA), but the circuitry of the UPS (or whatever is rated for that) reduces the 1500VA figure to around 900W. If you want to know the capacity of the battery, you may have to consult the manual for the battery specifications (or replacement information).Cracking the side also works, however I would not recommend that option. Once you have the capacity, multiply the amp-hour rating by its voltage to get a measure of Watt-hours (Wh). This is where the estimate becomes rather crude. The 4300MAH battery capacity (assuming a nominal cell voltage of 3.7V) would equate to around 16Wh of charge. Take the capacity of the UPS (in Wh) and divide it by the 16Wh of the phone to get a rough number of charges before losses. A ballpark number for efficiency of the system is 30% (I could be a fair bit off on this one), so take the number of charges and multiply it by .7 to get a final number. This is, of course, neglecting the power use of the UPS while it's not doing anything at all, which may reduce the charges by a significant amount.
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150FPS sounds about right for your hardware, are you using task manager to see GPU use? If so, you have nothing to worry about, as task manager usually does not show the correct amount anyway.
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CM 240 Lite Vs Arctic 34 Duo?
Opencircuit74 replied to ElderlyAnteater's topic in Custom Loop and Exotic Cooling
I've been running the CM 240 lite for a couple of years now and the performance has been great, but the fans have a lot of vibration. If you end up getting that one, you'd have to add extra rubber or something, as they make a horrible sound past 950RPM. -
It wants to know how big to make the partition, the default value (whatever is there initially) is the full capacity of the drive. Just leave that alone.
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