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Pc for $10000

hyper 212 evo...10k build...really?

 

He clearly has no clue, there's a lot wrong with that build. 5820K and BitFenix Spectre fans being the first that springs to mind. 780Ti waterblocks for GTX 980 cards and both a 212 Evo and an EK waterblock for the CPU.

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overkill on the psu:

@4:40

similar build only used 620 watts underload. 

The problem with most of these reviews, where they say you only need this much wattage to run this much gpus, is they never use the PSU they claim is capable of handling it. He's using a Antec HCP at either 1000 or 1300w as these are 2 of the available models from that product line up, the smallest is a 850w but in that video it isn't. It if was then that PSU label would show "50" not "00".

Guru3D tested 3-way GTX 980 at full load and their results comes out to 589w and yet their using a 1500w PSU.

http://www.guru3d.com/articles_pages/geforce_gtx_980_sli_review,4.html

It's always nice to have plenty of head room, so you won't have to worry about is my PSU going to handle it.

Intel Xeon E5 1650 v3 @ 3.5GHz 6C:12T / CM212 Evo / Asus X99 Deluxe / 16GB (4x4GB) DDR4 3000 Trident-Z / Samsung 850 Pro 256GB / Intel 335 240GB / WD Red 2 & 3TB / Antec 850w / RTX 2070 / Win10 Pro x64

HP Envy X360 15: Intel Core i5 8250U @ 1.6GHz 4C:8T / 8GB DDR4 / Intel UHD620 + Nvidia GeForce MX150 4GB / Intel 120GB SSD / Win10 Pro x64

 

HP Envy x360 BP series Intel 8th gen

AMD ThreadRipper 2!

5820K & 6800K 3-way SLI mobo support list

 

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The problem with most of these reviews, where they say you only need this much wattage to run this much gpus, is they never use the PSU they claim is capable of handling it. He's using a Antec HCP at either 1000 or 1300w as these are 2 of the available models from that product line up, the smallest is a 850w but in that video it isn't. It if was then that PSU label would show "50" not "00".

It's always nice to have plenty of head room, so you won't have to worry about is my PSU going to handle it.

I am certain they use a killawatt, and record the peak power draw, so the in the most extreme case. Safety is nice but to have 1000 watts over the required amount is going too far. 

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I am certain they use a killawatt, and record the peak power draw, so the in the most extreme case. Safety is nice but to have 1000 watts over the required amount is going too far. 

Hey, but if there is a great deal on it, then why not. :)

Intel Xeon E5 1650 v3 @ 3.5GHz 6C:12T / CM212 Evo / Asus X99 Deluxe / 16GB (4x4GB) DDR4 3000 Trident-Z / Samsung 850 Pro 256GB / Intel 335 240GB / WD Red 2 & 3TB / Antec 850w / RTX 2070 / Win10 Pro x64

HP Envy X360 15: Intel Core i5 8250U @ 1.6GHz 4C:8T / 8GB DDR4 / Intel UHD620 + Nvidia GeForce MX150 4GB / Intel 120GB SSD / Win10 Pro x64

 

HP Envy x360 BP series Intel 8th gen

AMD ThreadRipper 2!

5820K & 6800K 3-way SLI mobo support list

 

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If I had that budget, I might as well get a computer like JazyTwoCent's Skunkworks.

CPU: i7 9700K GPU: MSI RTX 2080 SUPER VENTUS Motherboard: ASRock Z390 Phantom Gaming 4 RAM: 16GB ADATA XPG GAMMIX D10 3000MHz Storage: ADATA SU630 480GB + Samsung 860 EVO 1TB + Samsung 970 EVO Plus NVMe 1TB + WD Blue 1TB PSU: HighPower 80+ Gold 650W Case: Slate MR Mirror Finish OS: Windows 11 Pro Monitor: Dell S2716DGR 27" Mouse: Logitech G300s Keyboard: Corsair K70 LUX Cherry MX Brown Speakers: Bose Companion 2 Series III Headset: HyperX Cloud Alpha Microphone: Razer Seiren X

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Hey, but if there is a great deal on it, then why not. :)

I know its bs but if he has 10k to burn, why not go enterprise level hardware. 

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I know its bs but if he has 10k to burn, why not go enterprise level hardware. 

Good idea! Here's what you can get for $10K

I doubt it will work, not sure if sever boards even support SLI,  but here's what I picked out. Newegg has some limits like on the GPU so I was force to pick 2 different Zotacs GTX 980s.

 

CPU: 2x Intel Xeon E5-2695 v3 14Cores/28Threads $5,000

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819117471

M/B: SuperMicro Dual LGA2011-3 $400

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813182938

RAM: 2x G.Skill 16GB (4x4GB) DDR4 2400 $540

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820231792

HSF: 2x Corsair H110 $230

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16835181035

GPU A: 2x Zotac GTX 980 $1,100

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814500361

GPU B: 1x Zotac GTX 980 $580

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814500359

SSD: Crucial MX550 1TB $470

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820148793

HDD: 2x Seagate 3TB 7200rpm $206

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16822148844

PSU: EVGA 1600w Platinum $395

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817438037

ODD: LG Blu-Ray Burner $65

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16827136269

CASE: Cosair 900D $320

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16811139019

OS: Win 8.1 Pro $140

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16832416778

$9,500 w/shipping

Intel Xeon E5 1650 v3 @ 3.5GHz 6C:12T / CM212 Evo / Asus X99 Deluxe / 16GB (4x4GB) DDR4 3000 Trident-Z / Samsung 850 Pro 256GB / Intel 335 240GB / WD Red 2 & 3TB / Antec 850w / RTX 2070 / Win10 Pro x64

HP Envy X360 15: Intel Core i5 8250U @ 1.6GHz 4C:8T / 8GB DDR4 / Intel UHD620 + Nvidia GeForce MX150 4GB / Intel 120GB SSD / Win10 Pro x64

 

HP Envy x360 BP series Intel 8th gen

AMD ThreadRipper 2!

5820K & 6800K 3-way SLI mobo support list

 

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hyper 212 evo...10k build...really?

that is just the cooler to make sure the components work right before the watercooling.

 

$222 in fans, not even good fans... i could see $200 in noctua's though

they really aren't bad, and they looks pretty damn sexy, so yeah...

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that is just the cooler to make sure the components work right before the watercooling.

 

they really aren't bad, and they looks pretty damn sexy, so yeah...

That makes sense, I forgot that intel2011 socket CPUs don't come with a heatsink.
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He clearly has no clue, there's a lot wrong with that build. 5820K and BitFenix Spectre fans being the first that springs to mind. 780Ti waterblocks for GTX 980 cards and both a 212 Evo and an EK waterblock for the CPU.

Bitfenix fans are decent and they look great. they are 780ti waterblocks because I just never changed them from when this was 780tis in it. it is best to have a cooler besides your full loop to make sure your cpu is doing fine. the 5820k is only a little more expensive than the 4790k, and it performs almost 50% better (though not that much in current games).

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it is best to have a cooler besides your full loop to make sure your cpu is doing fine.

 

Please do elaborate. How are you going to mount both?....

 

As for the 5820K it performs on par with a 4790K, however I was referring to the fact that you chose a 5820K and not a 5930K with that budget.

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Please do elaborate. How are you going to mount both?....

 

As for the 5820K it performs on par with a 4790K, however I was referring to the fact that you chose a 5820K and not a 5930K with that budget.

linus tested it, they (5820k and 5930k) perform the same. you use the hyper 212 when you test the components before you do all the watercooling so you don't need to redo all of it because a part was doa. Six cores isn't that important for gaming now, but in the next few years it will become more important, or in other words, the 5820k will age better. 

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linus tested it, they (5820k and 5930k) perform the same. you use the hyper 212 when you test the components before you do all the watercooling so you don't need to redo all of it because a part was doa. Six cores isn't that important for gaming now, but in the next few years it will become more important, or in other words, the 5820k will age better. 

 

The 5820K will age better because games will start taking advantage of more cores? How does that make sense? We're not talking about a gaming optimized build here, we're talking about spending $10,000 and getting the most out of it. While the 5930K may not have a direct impact on a strictly gaming situation it is going to help you out when running multiple applications next to your games (something that any MMO player with more than one screen should know very well).

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With 10k to burn, I'd probably choose neither 5820K nor 5930K, I'd directly go for 5690X anyway. But I doubt that, even if i had 10k lying around, I'd spend it on a rig like this. Some of it? Yes, but somewhere those diminishing returns make things only so much more expensive, without adding much more noticeable every day performance (for me.)

[Main rig "ToXxXiC":]
CPU: Intel Core i7-4790K | MB: ASUS Maximus VII Formula | RAM: G.Skill TridentX 32GB 2400MHz (DDR-3) | GPU: EVGA GTX980 Hydro Copper | Storage: Samsung 850 Pro 256GB SSD + Samsung 850 EVO 1TB SSD (+NAS) | Sound: OnBoard | PSU: XFX Black Edition Pro 1050W 80+ Gold | Case: Cooler Master Cosmos II | Cooling: Full Custom Watercooling Loop (CPU+GPU+MB) | OS: Windows 7 Professional (64-Bit)

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