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Davidwr80

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About Davidwr80

  • Birthday Jul 06, 1997

Contact Methods

  • Twitter
    @davidwr80

Profile Information

  • Gender
    Male
  • Location
    Vienna
  • Interests
    PC hardware, PC gaming, and Programming
  • Biography
    school => high-school-diploma => now hardstuck in Uni (ComSci & PolSci)
  • Occupation
    Student, ITSM technician

System

  • CPU
    R7 5800X @ 5.1 Ghz
  • Motherboard
    MSI X470 Gaming Plus Max
  • RAM
    Corsair Vengeance 32 GB 3200 MHz
  • GPU
    Aorus GTX 1080ti @ 2088 Mhz
  • Case
    Thermaltake Core X71 TG
  • Storage
    Samsung 970 Evo Plus 500GB, Samsung 840 evo 250 gb, Crucial MX300 275 M.2, Toshiba 256 GB NVMe SSD (OEM)
  • PSU
    CORSAIR RM1000i
  • Display(s)
    AOC Agon 27" 1440p 165Hz G-Sync, LG 2560X1080 34" 21:9 Monitor, 2X Acer 1080p 27" Monitor
  • Cooling
    Custom loop, all EK parts
  • Keyboard
    Surface Keyboard
  • Mouse
    Logitech G 900
  • Sound
    Logitech 5.1 Sourround Speaker, Logitech G 533 Headset, Rode NT-1A
  • Operating System
    Windows 10 Pro 64 Bit
  • PCPartPicker URL

Recent Profile Visitors

1,203 profile views
  1. That sounds more like RAM tbh. try runnig it at default speed (2133) and see if it still crashes.
  2. Take a look at SFX/SFX-L power supplys.
  3. Update: The BIOS update actually finished. it took ~15 hours, but everything works fine now.
  4. Ok, so I was thinking I would let it run overnight and see if it's finished tomorrow...I mean if it actually gets stuck, I should still be able to RMA it right?
  5. Hi, So I am currently updating the bios on my MSI X470 Gaming Plus Max. The thing is, its been 3 hours and I'm at 27%. The progress bar moves from 0% to 20% in like 2 min, but then it slowed down significantly. It's not stuck, it moves 1% every 25 min or so...Is this normal for MSI boards? I always had Asus boards before, they never took longer than maybe 2 or 3 min, so I'm kinda worried right now...
  6. I can speak from my experience, I have delidded 3 CPUs so far: 1. Don't re-seal it if you don't have to. The space reduction underneath the heat spreader is what gives you the biggest heat decrease. 2. You probably need more force than you think 3. While removing the heat spreader after using the Delid-Die-Mate, be extra careful to not rip off any small parts on the CPU. I destroyed a 600€ CPU because I wasn't careful in the last stage of the delid. 4. Finally, make sure to apply enough liquid metal to the CPU die as well as the heat spreader. Your temps will be awful if the liquid metal layers don't connect properly to each other. If all goes well, you will have a great overclocker at hand
  7. Sadly its currently disabled because of some Apex-exploid. Otherwise, I would have gladly provided you with the link.
  8. Why would u want to do that? there might be a better solution to your situation than obs
  9. Yeah, these CPUs are so expensive...I was playing with the Idea to buy like a 7800X and try if it would work again...but I don't want to kill that as well....
  10. Yes, but I think the board is ok, because it tries to boot, then shows a red light for CPU and 00. But then again, the CPU looks fine as well...
  11. I think that's only on the photo tho. Lighting wasn't that good
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