What's your budget mate, we'll start from thereMy 6 year old PC has died so it's time for an upgrade.
I'm completely out of touch with what is the current standard for processors and graphics cards.
I'll be editing large photos, GoPro footage and playing games occasionally as the Xbox gets used more.
Would an i5-6600K, MSI z170a tomahawk motherboard, MSI GTX 960 (4GB), 16GB of 2400 RAM be alright?
Is the GTX 960 better than the equivalent ATI card? Is there any benefit is getting even faster RAM? Any suggestions welcome!
The only change I'd make to that m8, would be to ditch the flexible SLi bridge and get a fixed one. I had issues with a couple of flexible bridges back in my GTX460 days. Blue-screening, sometimes saying that SLi was disabled when I'd only just put it on, etc. Switching to a rigid one fixed it immediately - plus it does look smarter with one fitted!
Did you test the motherboard outside of the case? May have been a shorting issue against the caseSo everything arrived for my new build, the only thing I used from my old build was a corsair 450w PSU and the 4x Hard drives.
I built it all up to the point of turning it on and all that happened was the fans span up - then died. Same thing over and over.
So I stripped the graphics card, same thing. Took the ram out, same thing, removed everything apart from the PSU and mobo, tested the PSU and thats fine, tested the mobo with another PSU and it still pulsed the fans. My conclusion was a faulty motherboard? Ended up building up my old set up in the new case and everything works fine again.
My only concern was that possibly the 450w PSU wasn't enough to power the motherboard but surely 450w is fine for just the motherboard alone. I can understand if I plugged the graphics in and then it started having problems. Replacement board is arriving tomorrow.
Not happy with the Corsair 330R titanium case tbh, very flimsy for me after coming from the Antec P180. The Antec is MUCH better of build quality and so much more silent. Shame tbh I think ill send the corsair back with the faults it has.
It won't be load on the PSU. A dead PSU maybe, but not overloaded.Thanks for the response - I think I'm missing something as well, been a while since I built a PC so probably something simple.
I will remove the battery on the mobo when I get home and try and re set it . I'm reading something about it being stuck in a boot loop.
Ordered a 550w psu to play it safe have got a lot running on it after all with a more powerful graphics card etc.
Yeah I agree about the corsair cases i like my antec p182 better but it's broken here and there, the p280 or whatever it's called the new version is too big to sit on my stand though unfortunately otherwise I'd get that.
You'd be surprised at how little loading even high end PC's put on a PSU.Thanks for the response - I think I'm missing something as well, been a while since I built a PC so probably something simple.
I will remove the battery on the mobo when I get home and try and re set it . I'm reading something about it being stuck in a boot loop.
Ordered a 550w psu to play it safe have got a lot running on it after all with a more powerful graphics card etc.
Yeah I agree about the corsair cases i like my antec p182 better but it's broken here and there, the p280 or whatever it's called the new version is too big to sit on my stand though unfortunately otherwise I'd get that.
Power
To test power consumption using our reference platform, a bit of creative math is needed. Since Haswell-E processors don’t have integrated GPU cores, we can’t boot the system without a discrete board installed to get a baseline. We are able to estimate consumption based on the approximate power draw of the test bench, though. In our observations, we’ve found that the approximate power draw from everything other than the GPU is 120W. By deducting that from the recorded wattage reported on our in-line power meter, we can calculate the approximate draw of the GPU.
There I was thinking you'd grown out of pointless benchmarking and just spent all your money on unusable power insteadlol bro, I just sold both my TITAN X with EK blocks :smiley:
Unrelated, my ASUS Impact i5 6600K with 4Ghz memory, great little system.
View attachment 147963
I have some nice GSKILL Trident 8GB sticks in my X99 build.
3200MHz-32GB-C13-13-13-36-1T @ 1.4v
How come you're rocking i5's over i7's?lol bro, I just sold both my TITAN X with EK blocks :smiley:
Unrelated, my ASUS Impact i5 6600K with 4Ghz memory, great little system.
View attachment 147963
I have some nice GSKILL Trident 8GB sticks in my X99 build.
3200MHz-32GB-C13-13-13-36-1T @ 1.4v
Guessing it's not his only system seeing his past hardware! I mean read the start of the post ffs. "just sold BOTH my TX's" lol.
I'd say that's more money than my whole system.... To my mrs :wink:
I'm on a single 980 Ti mate... one of those has been returned as it is faulty.lol bro, I just sold both my TITAN X with EK blocks :smiley:
Fair enough! I'm on a single TX which will be going Monday. Then it's the count down till Pascal :wink:I'm on a single 980 Ti mate... one of those has been returned as it is faulty.
There I was thinking you'd grown out of pointless benchmarking and just spent all your money on unusable power instead :tongueout:
Yeah, that's what I'm waiting for. The performance figures look staggering. Sadly I'm currently unemployed and I no longer get toys and samples to play withThen it's the count down till Pascal :wink:
It's on my list of "wants".Anyone rocking M.2 SSD? My new board supports it so quite fancy it for the OS. 2100MB read and 1250MB write speeds sound great. Not very expensive now either.