Jump to content

Lerixo

Member
  • Posts

    22
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Awards

This user doesn't have any awards

Recent Profile Visitors

The recent visitors block is disabled and is not being shown to other users.

Lerixo's Achievements

  1. Ok im just using my ohm meter and check with ports on the psu side lead to the ends of my plugs. Thanks marius.
  2. Thanks! That really explains the situation on the ATX side. I should be able to just reverse engineer my current cables then, as all wil be sleeved piece by piece, to get a good result. What still bothers me is the difference between the EPS and pcie pins, as i get more pins on the inlet side, then on the outlet. I might be able to do it the same as with the ATX, and take it apart, but some info would be great too.
  3. Yeah like i buy a cable kit for 150 bucks, if the parts for it are around 30 bucks.
  4. To confect something is the serial production of something, but also yes. Something edible
  5. Hello and good afternoon. I have a bit of an more specific problem rn, i will just speak it out so you will know where im standing. I finally got my hands on a fitting crimping wrench and now im starting my project i wanted to do a while ago. Currently i have a bequiet! power zone 750W modular PSU, and a while ago i wanted to craft my own cables for it. The procedure seems simple, if you won't switch some pin out wrong. The thing is: The power inlet on my components are: 24pin ATX - 8 + 6 pin EPS - 8 + 6 pin Pcie. What bothers me is that: My PSU has a 20+8 pin outlet for the 24pin ATX connection, an 12pin outlet for pcie, and a 10pin outlet for my EPS. Sooooo you kinda see the problem right now i'd guess. As i have no idea how the pinout is, except the position, or how many cables are really needed, or even doubled...... or have insight about the real electrical specs of my PSU, im asking if anyone ever built their own cables for a modular PSU, and if so, if you could give me an idea andor knowledge about how this works. I should be ablet to logically figure it out then. I will add a picture of the slots on my PSU. Greets - Lerixo
  6. I slaughtered my old case even more, i think i made a fusion core here. Pretty nice color imo, its an adressable strip too, but either full white, or this light blue
  7. Yeah, only thing hindering here is the standart PSU cables didnt have the money to get me custom made ones sadly. maybe in the future tho
  8. To say something about noc fans: I mean, under heavy load, they arent silent ofc. but still it feels more like a standart fan on 1400rpm ish, when they are running 2k (like the 80mm fans). The 200mm fan is also throttled, to ensure a nice airflow. id guess the 200mm would have some kind of blowy sound on max rpm, like a fan this big would do
  9. Hello! After a long time of saving money for some parts, and calculating on what to get and what not, i finally was able to build my system! Its not really a fresh build, most of the parts were slaughtered out of my old ATX-System, so all i had to get was a new MB (Z390 Phantom Gaming ITX/Asrock), a case, in this project the Thermaltake Core V1 in white, and a new cooler. For cooling especially i got all Noctua Fans, and for the Cpu-Cooler the NH-D9L, as its small, with high build quality and also a pretty high given TDP for the size, which is 140 watts. As its my first ITX-build i encountered some issues along the way. Trickiest thing was to fit my 280mm GTX 1080 into the case. I had to insert it from the front and slide it through, but before that i had to unscrew the 200mm fan, its a bit stuffed but it works! Also another thing im considering is to get handmade cables, when i have the money for it. Im using the standart cables from my modular PSU, and its just so much stuff thats hindering airflow, but luckily not like really a problem. When it was done, after a short problem with the windows installation (always click the right boot device boys and girls!), it was up and running! When all missing tools were installed, i started to look into a little oc'ing hehe. Under the NH-D9L i could punch my 8700k up to 4.9 ghz, with 1.27V. It needs still a small adjustment, most likely i should turn AVX offset to three -under heavy avx load it heats up, but ever so slightly, but in the end after around 15 mins it would begin to throttle-. But as its happy with that i gave it, and works stable under any load, i'll take care of that a bit later :) Final Specs are: i7 8700k (delidded) AsRock Z390 Phantom Gaming ITX GTX 1080 Gigabyte Windforce OC 16 GB RAM, 3200mhz, CL14 PSU: Power Zone 750w bequiet! CPU-Cooler: NH-D9L Noctua 960 EVO 500GB Boot Device/important software 2TB WD Blue HDD Im happy with it as you can see, and hope some of you will like it! :) Greets, Lerixo
  10. i think its in the forum rules, to not publish gofundmes.
  11. ive made some fitting checks, and yes, all should work. i also cut some unnecessary stuff from the to buy list, and im now sitting on around 470€~. this includes 3 case fans (2x80mm, 1x200mm noctuas), the case itself, asrock mainboard, a dustfilter sticker mat, and the heatsink, which is the noctua nh-d9L. below is a well "painted" picture, which shows the position of everything. ive made this to show my cable manufacturer which lenghts will be neede minimum. for the cable colors, i thought about an dark green, all 8pins with extremely white outdr canles, 2 inner one with the dark green, 24 pin will have also beige outlines, 2 rows white, and the middle all green. i think this would be a nice contrast to the beige brown, on a black and mostly white base. what do you think?
  12. i checked, its insane, like this case was made for this build.... windforce has a card length of 280mm. The case holds, without the optional HDD cage, 285mm's. I truly was happy when i found it, before that, the coolermaster elite 130 was in my eye, but i couldnt get the cooling straight in my mind.
  13. For 80mm's these exact ones i wanna buy and did you mistype the cooler name? cause thats the one i wrote about
  14. Thats true, i actually had to put it up by 0.015V. Under any stresstest it worked fine, until i opened a realistic load, Path of Exile in that instance. Yea, it fell after 2 mins ingame I am also now using an adaptive way of setting the vcore to 1.085v (asus board), realistically it sits under 1.1 V. So far it seems super stable, like nothing happened. Greets
  15. Hello everyone. For transportation needs, im looking forward to build a system of my current hardware, into an mITX sized Case. My current hardware is: i7-8700k (delidded, undervolted to x43 on 1.085vcore) gigabyte 1080 windforce oc z370-f asus board 500gb m2 ssd, 2TB HDD 3.2ghz cl14 ram. POWER ZONE 750w modular PSU To solve thermical problems, i am choosing the Thermaltake core V1: https://de.thermaltake.com/C_00002373.htm As cpu sink, the Noctua NH-D9L: https://noctua.at/de/nh-d9l (for cause of size, but still to keep decent cooling) And for the board the AsRock Z390 Gaming-ITX: https://www.asrock.com/MB/Intel/Z390%20Phantom%20Gaming-ITXac/index.asp Accessories will also be a thing, like dust filters, y cables etc, but i will also change the front 200mm fan for a Noctua PWM one, aswell as adding 2x Noctua 80mm's on the rear. Another thing is, im in contact with a small manufacturer, who does make PSU and sata sleeved cables, so i wont have any problems in fitting all the long cables in from my PSU, to further enhance airflow. I actually switched from a Coolermaster ITX case to this, as here i dont see any problems with heat stacking up, also it allows me to get a tower cooler, instead of a small top blower. (may get higher Core ratios through that... dunno where that will get me.) In the attachments, i have linked the complete buy list, aswell as a drawing of the filled case, so you can have a look at the fan positions, or what it is capable off. Tell me your ideas! Does anyone of you see anything complicated with this build? Have a good one, -bIRD ITX Case_Alternate.pdf ITX_Mind.pdf
×