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Will G3258 bottleneck a gtx 760?

Will g3258 bottleneck a gtx 760?

And, does 500W psu can handle gtx 760?

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It won't bottleneck the GTX 760, however I suggest overclocking it. I believe you should have a higher wattage PSU like a 600w+

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No bottleneck, and PSU should be fine

Intel Core i7 9700k - EVGA FTW GTX 970

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Will g3258 bottleneck a gtx 760?

And, does 500W psu can handle gtx 760?

1. In what kind of games?

2. It should, but what 500W specifically?

"Rawr XD"

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1. In what kind of games?

2. It should, but what 500W specifically?

1. I mostly play games like BF4/3/H, Gta v, csgo, and some upcoming games like NFS, battlefront, Rainbow 6 siege, AC Syndicate

2.FSP Hexa plus h2-500w

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1. I mostly play games like BF4/3/H, Gta v, csgo, and some upcoming games like NFS, battlefront, Rainbow 6 siege, AC Syndicate

BF and GTA V will definitely struggle on the G3258, as will upcoming AAA titles. Try to get at least an i3.

"Rawr XD"

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And, im gonna upgrade the cpu to i3 or i5 in october or december

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BF and GTA V will definitely struggle on the G3258, as will upcoming AAA titles. Try to get at least an i3.

im gonna upgrade the cpu to i3 or i5 in october or december

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Noep, It won't bottle neck it. :)

Main PC: 4690k, LMG Edition G1 Gaming GTX 980, 16GB Hyper X Fury, Asus Z97-A, EVGA G2 850W, Crucial MX100 128GB, WD Red 1TB 2.5", Dark Rock 3

Laptop: Asus UX305 Monitor: Asus PB278Q Keyboard: Filco Majestouch 2 TKL Mouse: Corsair M65

 

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im gonna upgrade the cpu to i3 or i5 in october or december

Honestly it's not worth it for 2.5 months, unless you're going to get another motherboard for the G3258 and use it somewhere else.

"Rawr XD"

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Will g3258 bottleneck a gtx 760?

And, does 500W psu can handle gtx 760?

bottleneck isn't the best word here. in some games, a better processor would give better performance, but the 760 and G3258 still combine well.

that system will do fine on a 500W PSU. I tested my friend's machine  with an overclocked G3258 and 760 and it drew around 300 watts under full load, running on a 500W PSU. (even though you could, I don't recommend going below 500W)

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bottleneck isn't the best word here. in some games, a better processor would give better performance, but the 760 and G3258 still combine well.

that system will do fine on a 500W PSU. I tested my friend's machine with an overclocked G3258 and 760 and it drew around 300 watts under full load, running on a 500W PSU. (even though you could, I don't recommend going below 500W)

does the FSP hexa plus h2-500w is a good psu?
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bottleneck isn't the best word here. in some games, a better processor would give better performance, but the 760 and G3258 still combine well.

that system will do fine on a 500W PSU. I tested my friend's machine with an overclocked G3258 and 760 and it drew around 300 watts under full load, running on a 500W PSU. (even though you could, I don't recommend going below 500W)

does the FSP hexa plus h2-500w is a good psu?
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does the FSP hexa plus h2-500w is a good psu?

as far as I can tell, FSP make pretty decent power supplies, but I have no firsthand experience

I will add though, that I don't like power supplies with dual 12V rails. I only and will continue to only buy power supplies with a 12V rail, even including one PSU I have with a monsterous 80 amp 12V rail

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as far as I can tell, FSP make pretty decent power supplies, but I have no firsthand experience

I will add though, that I don't like power supplies with dual 12V rails. I only and will continue to only buy power supplies with a 12V rail, even including one PSU I have with a monsterous 80 amp 12V rail

What the difference between single and dual 12v rails?

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BF and GTA V will definitely struggle on the G3258, as will upcoming AAA titles. Try to get at least an i3.

 

I've played using that cpu, It doesn't struggle badly, It actually manages to play them games quite well, with a bit of overclocking you should be better.

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does the FSP hexa plus h2-500w is a good psu?

Sure, it's not the best but if you already have it, it will handle a 760 perfectly fine. It's like the EVGA 500W1. If you haven't bought it though there are better options.

"Rawr XD"

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What the difference between single and dual 12v rails?

single 12V rail means that all of the components share the same power source. dual rails mean that there are two 12V sources. sometimes this results in one component drawing more than it's rail can supply, because that component can only access half of the power available. generally this is not an issue though, and in your case you will be fine, but I prefer any one component to have access to all of the 12V power at once, and powering a GPU from two rails might not be a good idea (although it might not be an issue, I'm unsure)

 

if you want to check it out, Linus did a FAP video

I'm actually watching it right now, kinda interested

edit: a bit of research shows that multi rail power supplies are perfectly fine, and even may have slightly better safety, as they prevent overloading more effectively, and should have no issues with delivering power as long as a single component doesn't draw more power on a connector than it is supposed to.

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single 12V rail means that all of the components share the same power source. dual rails mean that there are two 12V sources. sometimes this results in one component drawing more than it's rail can supply, because that component can only access half of the power available. generally this is not an issue though, and in your case you will be fine, but I prefer any one component to have access to all of the 12V power at once, and powering a GPU from two rails might not be a good idea (although it might not be an issue, I'm unsure)

if you want to check it out, Linus did a FAP video

I'm actually watching it right now, kinda interested

edit: a bit of research shows that multi rail power supplies are perfectly fine, and even may have slightly better safety, as they prevent overloading more effectively, and should have no issues with delivering power as long as a single component doesn't draw more power on a connector than it is supposed to.

Ok, thanks man for the help!
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