Jump to content

KayNine

Member
  • Posts

    107
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Awards

This user doesn't have any awards

  1. Thanks. Much better. It turns out I already had dual link. I still have yet to wait for a new monitor soon.
  2. I think only the X79 platforms can quad-channel memory.
  3. Allright, awesome. Thanks. This clarifies the dual-link quite a bit.
  4. I still don't know which is dual link. But anyway, do you think those two monitors make any difference?
  5. so that's DVI-D, not DVI-I, right?
  6. As the title says, any differences? more questions: If I were ever to buy a regular 144 hz monitor (not G-sync) because I am too impatient to wait for a G-Sync monitor), is there any special DVI-D or DVI-I cable required in order to take advantage of the 144 hz? Or I can slot a HDMI cable and get past 200 frames per second without seeing tearing? I can build a computer, but I can't understand my monitor. I need help on stuff like this. Thanks.
  7. Man, this CPU overclocking thing is like winning/losing a lottery... this CPU can't match any of my friend's 3570k's I kept raising the voltage even up to 1.15V earlier, I still failed to remain stable.
  8. I tried this setting, I crashed before I even logged into windows. What other settings do you use? I guess I can't really use other's settings, not that I've always tried that though. I did slowly increase the frequency and the voltage on my own though.
  9. That sounds okay, at least for now... oh god, what if I plan on liquid cooling? I'd have no idea when the CPU would die. But I have to overclock, even though I'm worrying about that, I'm being bottle necked at the moment.
  10. How high can I go with the voltage before I kill my CPU?
  11. Manual. I raised the CPU voltage and frequency until it becomes unstable.
  12. So, I got the Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO, installed it, and I raised the CPU Voltage from 1.12 V to 1.14 V. I cannot get 4.2 GHz stable at all. All I did was raise the frequency (ghz) until it crashes, then turn up the voltage until stable. Then repeat. Am I missing anything?
  13. Allright, I'll hope to find a GTX 750 that requires only 300 Watts. This is for a friend of mine that may want to upgrade soon, so I need to make sure something fits into his 350 Watt power supply from HP. I doubt that power supply is 80+ or anything...
×