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BasedHeathen

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    Fairmont, MN

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  1. That's my mistake. It appears that the water block has a single cable that powers both the pump and the fan. The other cable is for the block's LED.
  2. Correct. The AIO did come with a fan hub, to which I connected the three radiator fans and the pump fan, then to an RGB header on the board. My issue is that there was no labeling to differentiate between the cables attached to the block. But, a simple power test to make sure everything works as intended should solve that.
  3. I'll admit that the installation instructions for this AIO are a bit confusing. The AIO installation instructions state that the AIO pump cable should be connected to the CPU_FAN header, but my Asus PRIME X570-PRO motherboard documentation states that it should be connected to the AIO_PUMP header.
  4. Nearly finished with the build. Though the ATX cable that was included with the RM 750x that I ordered is an 18+8 (total 26 pins), and the ATX header on my board is a 24-pin.
  5. Not the particular monitors I would have chosen, but they were gifts from family, so I had to find a use for them.
  6. Case: Corsair Carbide Series SPEC-06 MB: ASUS Prime x570-Pro CPU: Ryzen 7 3700X Cooling: DeepCool Captain 360EX RGB AIO RAM: 16GB Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro GPU: Gigabyte GeForce RTX 2070 Super Storage: Seagate FireCuda 520 1TB M.2 SSD PSU: Corsair RM 750X Modular Display: Dual Samsung CF591 27" Curved FHD Monitors
  7. My current build has an Intel Core i5-650 CPU running Windows 10 version 1909, and I've decided to move over to an AMD Ryzen 7 3700X. Both hard drives are 1TB, but my question is, can I clone the old SSD to the new M.2 SSD without issue, or will the chipset drivers conflict with the Intel drivers? Thus, would it be easier to fresh install Windows 10 on the new SSD and manually migrate?
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