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FunkyHunk

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About FunkyHunk

  • Birthday Aug 23, 1981

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Northern Norway
  • Interests
    Computers, old cars, beer.
  • Occupation
    Parts manager at worlds northernmost Harley Davidson dealer.

System

  • CPU
    Ryzen 7 2700X @4.05ghz
  • Motherboard
    Gigabyte DS3h B450m
  • RAM
    16gb 3200mhz Corsair
  • GPU
    2080TI Founders Edition
  • Case
    2002 Powermac G4 Graphite
  • Storage
    500gb Samsung 970 Evo nvme m.2
  • PSU
    750w Corsair ATX
  • Display(s)
    49" Phillips 4k@60hz main, 24" 1080p@60hz secondary
  • Cooling
    Corsair H60 AIO plus 3X Noctua NF-A12's
  • Keyboard
    yes
  • Mouse
    yes
  • Sound
    yes
  • Operating System
    Win10, MacOS High Sierra Hackintosh
  • Laptop
    no

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  1. Thanks everybody for your input. I installed Elementary OS 5.1.2 finally and have been using it for a few weeks now. It's been working okay really. Had a bit of an issue with the screen output going dark when loading the display drivers. I got around that, and it worked since. Only thing is, I'd like the display zoom to work better. Elementary os only lets me zoom 1:1 or 2:1 when running the 49" displays native resolution in 4k. and 1080p on it looks a little bit meh. I'd like to zoom maybe 1.5x or 1.75x.
  2. I'll check elementary OS out, thanks. distrowatch was messy, but lots of info. Well, inconsistencies in programs is a given with the open source nature of Linux. MacOS doesn't support my current hardware so I can't use it without video acceleration, that is why I want to use Linux that looks like MacOS. (as I said I like the look) I'll check out bodhi also. How is Linux with support for my 2080ti? Are the drivers good?
  3. So, as the title states, i've thought about installing Linux again after a long absence. I haven't had Linux installed on any of my pc's in around 15 years. Not since Red Hat 8.0 in 2002 or something. The first Red Hat I installed was version 5 in 1998. I always used the Afterstep window manager because I liked the look. And the gnome desktop looked like poo at that time. Example: I even used the Litestep shell for my windows install in that time to keep with the theme. Those were the days. (insert member berries meme here) I installed MacOS High Sierra/win10 dualboot when I built my new rig in a 2002 Powermac G4 graphite case over a year ago, but since my 2080tiFE is too new for the Nvidia web drivers for mac (only support up to 1080ti witch was my previous gpu), I havent used MacOS in a while, so now I have a spare 80gb sata ssd just waiting for a new os to dualboot alongside win10. And also gaming is coming along for Linux now, so the future looks bright. A pic of my mancave. I've since relocated the Computer to the window behind the sofa to manage the case temps under heavy loads. (it's tiny) And also, outside temps during the winter in northern Norway is ideal for gaming rigs on window sills. I've found a few YT videos of people modifying linux to look like MacOS, so to keep up with the theme of the build I want to install Linux and modify it to look exactly like MacOS. A blatant ripoff if you will. I like the look and feel of MacOS, but disliked the lack of GPU support. I guess that's where Linux comes in. So, what distros would be the best to MacOS-ify, or is there any updated and active already customized distros available? I've looked a bit at Pearl Linux, based on gnome I think, but that looks discontinued. Do you guys have any other suggestions?
  4. If you are into the rpg genre, you should take a look into playing Mass Effect 1, 2 and 3. The story is insane, choices you take in 1 or 2 will affect the outcome of the game in the third game . You import the savegame and character from the first game to the second and third game. Also if you have them installed I would recommend downloading updated texture packs. They really improve the look massively. You have hundreds of hours in those three games alone. They are also pretty old, they will run on potatoes, not that they are bad looking.
  5. You should get some pc133 ram chips, and run the front side bus to 133mhz, very easy overclocking on these processors I believe your processor had multiplicator set to 4x100mhz, so if you got a hold of 133mhz ram you should break 532mhz easy peasy. You just have to set the jumpers on the motherboard according to the table corresponding to 133mhz. Jumpers and table circled in red on this photo you shared: I believe there was also available pc150 ramm modules back in the day. Also making overclocking with fixed multiplicators easy. I ran my 650mhz pentium III on 864mhz for years.
  6. Well, it looks like I haven't punised my bank account enough this year so, suddenly I have a rtx2080ti Founders Edition heading my way. I guess the R7 2700x @4.1/4.2ghz won't be a bottleneck to get the full performance from the 2080ti? Anybody know? Also, I think I'm going to order an EVGA Powerlink, going to attempt a bit of a tidy of the cabling in the near future.
  7. Sharing is caring Here you go, for all interested in macOS on AMD cpus: AMD-OSX Forums It requires some additional tinkering to get to work on AMD, a little bit extra in contrast to installing macOS on an intel system. Also, Nvidia drivers for macOS is not released for Mojave yet, so if you want 3d acceleration in the OS you have to stick to High Sierra for now. This is the guide I followed to install macOS 10.13.3 on my computer: INSTALL AND POSTINSTALL OF HIGHSIERRAAMD V3 UNOFFICIAL You also have to do a separate guide to install Nvidia web drivers to get a nvidia gpu to work on macOS. Most AMD gpus work fine natively in macOS.
  8. Thanks buddy! I had one spare 80gb ssd after I upgraded my old 256gb 960evo from my old pc, and bought a new 500gb 970 evo. I took the old 80gb from the old pc, and put the 256gb in the livingroom pc where my old pc is now. Then the old 80gb ssd was available for new duties as macOS disk. The mobo is also smart since it boots from the last booted disk until I choose the other one in the bios boot menu. I've never had a mac/apple pc, so this was a learning experience for me as well. I got great help from the amdosx forums to install macOS, as it requires a recompiled kernel to boot on amd cpus as well. I just disconnected all drives until I was done installing High Sierra, as not to fuk up something on the other drives by mistake. I'm also contemplating upgrading the gpu to a RTX2080Super or a RTX2080TI, since they are both shorter and narrower than the gtx1080 I have now. That MSI Gaming X gpu is yuuge. Since space is at a premium inside my case I think it would benefit both airflow and temperatures with a smaller albeit more powerful gpu. Also I want everything to run smooth in 4k/60fps.
  9. Here it is in its proper place: Installing macOS: I run macOS on a separate 80gb intel SSD, and windows 10 from my samsung nvme. And a cinebench run before overclocking and installing the Nvidia Web Drivers on High Sierra. In its temporary placement in the livingroom: When I started this build I knew that cooling would be a challenge since the case is tiny, and not many alternatives were to be found as to fan placement. I found the optimal position for the aio radiator, as seen on the following pics pulling air into the case. I also had one 120mm fan in the back wall pulling air out, opposite from the door, but that was too little. The in-case temp was around 55c when gaming or benchmarking, and the gpu/cpu was around 80c. Not good. So I had to get more air in and out. I ordered two noctua NF-A12, and one NF-F12 for the radiator, and got to work. One exhaust hole was cut on the top of the case next to the psu, and one more intake hole was cut on the bottom of the case, next to the radiator. That got the cpu temps down to 72deg max running aida54/prime95, and the GPU down to between 65/70 degrees depending on the game/benchmark. Fan placement, filters on all fans to keep the dust out: Placement of the aio and the other intake fan on the inside: There are not many options for cable management inside the case tho. Since it has the side door design, placement of the cables is hard to get right, and the cables from the psu is just too short for a proper routing. This means that the cables are just placed in there, not being too restrictive for airflow. Here are a few photos of the layout inside. It's not pretty, but the pc works great Lastly, a few pics of the front/side. I installed a USB3 hub with 7 ports where the CDrom used to be. And in the panel below that is the 3 position fan controller from my old Lian Li case. It's almost always on the quietest setting. So, what do you guys think?
  10. Hello guys and gals! Long time lurker here, been following build threads on this forum a long time. I decided to make my own thread about my latest custom build. Earlier builds I have done have been with storebought cases, mostly Lian Li cases since I liked their design and build quality alot. Some time ago in 2016 I got a powermac g4 from the early 2000's when a friend of mine cleaned up the house after her father passed away. This macine was immaculate, had sat for lots and lots of years. The harddrive was noisy and the fans were all rattling, but everything was working perfectly-ish. It even came with the original keyboard and one button mouse. I was thinking of using all the internals, except for a new m-atx motherboard for my then i5 4690k/atx msi gaming 5/zotac gtx780/8gb ddr3 1600mhz gaming rig in a huge Lian Li case. But time went by, and the case just sat there, not doing anything. Then it came time to upgrade as the old build (no slouch tho) was beginning to show its age. I then comprised this list of hardware for my powermac build: Cpu: Ryzen 7 2700X Cooler: Corsair H60 120mm AIO Mobo: Gigabyte B450m DS3H Ram: GSkill 3200mhz ddr4 16gb (2x8gb) HDD: 1x samsung 960 evo m.2 nvme (from the old pc) 1x 4tb Seagate 7200rpm (from the old pc) GPU: MSI Gaming X 1080 8gb (bought used from a friend) PSU: 2010 Corsair 1000w semi modular (large type) (from the old pc) And the old Powermac case of course. Here is the old 780 next to the 1080, just to compare the sizes. I was doubtful before going in to this project if I could get that 1080 into the case without problems. First thing I did after cleaning out the old hw from the case was going to the electronics recycling place, to get me a donor pc that I could hack out the mobo tray with standoffs and such to transplant into the g3 case. I decided to try to get the pc as close to unmodified as possible, keeping all the stock look and feel, while modernizing it to be a nice powerful daily driver. First I drilled out all the rivets for the side door to get it separated from the rest of the case, and then removed ther IO panel on the back, to get rid of the strange apple layout. And after a LOT of cutting/measuring/cutting/measuring/drilling/riveting this was the result: I had to redesign it a bit as I hadn't made room for the hinge. But It got done, and I assembled it. More pictures to follow next post
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