New Computer
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@numerobis said:
Yes, the kingston ssd now 300v is nice for the price. I have the 120 gb version in a render node as budget version. Very fast. The only thing i don't know is how it bahaves over the time. But it should be ok.
It cost just 722 so I think I take it.
Now I am on a total of 7846:- with 16 gig ram
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Another "cheap" option could be the good old Crucial M4 128GB (or 256GB). I think it's still a good drive. I'm not sure about the Sandforce chipset of the kingston... i think the marvell chip would be better.
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@vigge50 said:
A hard drive is not a 32- bit or a 64-bit
http://www.sevenforums.com/backup-restore/139224-backup-32bit-external-hard-drive-64-a.htmlIn most cases( but not all) the hardware is ok ( For example go to the Seagate site) but the bundled software may not be. If you have no use for any of its support software then your choice. I would check with manufacture to make sure you are OK.
I did not pick up on what OS you are planning. I no not know if the high level formatting ( required)is any different than what you have. I would not think MS would not do that to user but?? If so make sure you save critical data.BTW I have xp sp3 and have my disk format fat32 because I hand some legacy DOS programs I wanted to run. Windows 7 default is NTFS and I do not know if it will still allow FAT 32 like xp. Next change I'll have to convert. MS does have a convert utility. The link you cite as showing 32 vs 64 leaves too many questions to establish closed form solution. All that proves for now is it worked for that users configuration and hardware. Ask your manufacture?
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Found this one now on 35% sale for just 699:- MSI GeForce GTX 550Ti V2 1GB DDR5 2xDVI HDMI PCIe
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maybe look for a review with noise level testing... i don't know how quiet the fan of the cheap MSI cards is. Normally the video card fan will be the loudest part of your system now.
But it will be hard to judge by reading reviews... Maybe you should buy it and if it is too noisy than you can change the cooler for an arctic cooling one or something like this (but then you will loose the warranty of your card - theoretically)....just to be clear, i can't promise you that a 550TI is faster in Sketchup than a 650. I can only look at the reviews like you do!
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@numerobis said:
maybe look for a review with noise level testing... i don't know how quiet the fan of the cheap MSI cards is. Normally the video card fan will be the loudest part of your system now.
But it will be hard to judge by reading reviews... Maybe you should buy it and if it is too noisy than you can change the cooler for an arctic cooling one or something like this (but then you will loose the warranty of your card - theoretically)....just to be clear, i can't promise you that a 550TI is faster in Sketchup than a 650. I can only look at the reviews like you do!
I saw that that prices is just until tomorrow so I think I buy it now
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I have bought everything and just wait for the motherboard and the PSU. When I read littel more about optimize airflow and like that I found out that my chassi would suck in dust, is it worth to by a dust filter and place at the frontfan or would it just stop the airflow to much? I read somewhere that to optimize the airflow, you would block the fan holes that you don't so that the air go the way you want. Is it good or bad? I would have two openings on the side.
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Get a dust filter, or if you want really want to go cheap, a cut-up piece of women's hose will do the trick. Blocking the unused fan ports is a good idea, it will prevent dust and lint uptake and prevent it from clogging heat critical cooling fans like the CPU and graphics cards. If they aren't blocked they need to have filters. Those can be difficult to clean due to the fine cooling fins that trap dirt, so the best thing is to prevent as little dust from getting in as possible.
Directing airflow is not such a big deal unless you don't have fans that blow air over your HDD(SSD) or memory. Some people have a preference for positive or negative case pressure, I prefer positive so I can control where air comes from. Preferably from a filtered source. I've taken cases that have negative pressure apart, every tiny hole leading into the case is clogged with dust and lint and that's only what got trapped, the rest is in the case.
My filters get vacuumed once a week or so, they need it. It's amazing how much crud they pick up.
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Tanks for the tip, do i need a filter at the back fan there I would blow out the air?
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@vigge50 said:
Found this one now on 35% sale for just 699:- MSI GeForce GTX 550Ti V2 1GB DDR5 2xDVI HDMI PCIe
I would love the new MSI GTX 680!
I ordered a normal GTX 680 but still dreaming of the MSI versino for my second card...
What website did you find the deal on?
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@liam887 said:
@vigge50 said:
Found this one now on 35% sale for just 699:- MSI GeForce GTX 550Ti V2 1GB DDR5 2xDVI HDMI PCIe
I would love the new MSI GTX 680!
I ordered a normal GTX 680 but still dreaming of the MSI versino for my second card...
What website did you find the deal on?
That was on a Swedish website but that offer isn't anymore so now it cost 1080 Swedish crowns and that's about 125 € but it wasn't GTX 680, it was GTX 550ti
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@vigge50 said:
@liam887 said:
@vigge50 said:
Found this one now on 35% sale for just 699:- MSI GeForce GTX 550Ti V2 1GB DDR5 2xDVI HDMI PCIe
I would love the new MSI GTX 680!
I ordered a normal GTX 680 but still dreaming of the MSI versino for my second card...
What website did you find the deal on?
That was on a Swedish website but that offer isn't anymore so now it cost 1080 Swedish crowns and that's about 125 € but it wasn't GTX 680, it was GTX 550ti
Yes but I only have a stock GTX 680, the MSI version is much superior but expensive. I wouldn't run more than one stock card at a time anyway as I am worried about overheating.
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No filters are necessary at the outflow fans, only fans that intake air from the outside. I'm not sure exactly what you're asking, though; do you mean a filter behind a fan vs. in front? If so, the filter should be on the intake side of the fan and preferably on the external side of the case. It's much easier to clean an external filter. You want to avoid opening your case to clean, that's just risking damage to sensitive components, especially if you plan on using a vacuum cleaner. Those things are static discharge generating monsters.
Edit: I looked at your case (Cooler Master 310). It looks like you have 1 included fan in the rear and options for a side and front fan. The power supply comes with its own outflow fan. Your case is not a "quiet" case, so I would look for the quietest and highest CFM fan you can get in the 120 mm size to push air though the case and over your storage media. I cannot tell from the description if the fan intakes have filters included.
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I world get the last things tomorow and going to built everything on Friday when I have some time over, to make the best cable management and airflow, there would I set the DVD-reader and the hard drive?
I self think that the hard drive would be place as low as possible then it is a ssd it downt need so much air cooling and then it's best to place it there it have as low impact on the airflow as possible, and is it is place long way from the motherboard and the PSU it would stench out the cables. The DVD reader I really don't know, would it be placed as far down as possible so that the cables can be place over it or is it better to do the opposite? -
The hdd should be placed in the airflow behind the front fan (or air inlet)
The SSD can be mounted everywhere. No need for cooling. Do you have a mounting kit for 2,5" drives? (2,5" to 3,5" or 2,5" to 5,25")
Place the DVD where ever you want and where you feel comfortable with it. I normally use the highest slot of a case to have more room in the case and because it's better to handle for me staying under the desk...My Cooler Master cases have a plastic fabric as filter. And it looks like the CM310 has it too:
But concerning the airflow... I don't think that this case is ideal for maximum airflow. The front is almost closed and the mounting for the HDDs is blocking the way... but i don't think that this will be a problem.
Maybe you can rotate the HDD cage, i don't know.I have this one for all of my nodes:
http://www.coolermaster.com/product.php?product_id=6656with open front and HDD cage 90° rotated.
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My thoughts too, not the best case for cooling, but seeing as this system isn't going to be overclocked and will otherwise see moderate use, the cooling will be adequate. Especially if the side panel fan is employed and an SSD is used.
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I read in another forum that one have take away the grill at the back of the case to make better airflow and drop the tempature, is that hard to do and is it worth it? Mayby I can do something similar at the intake in the front of the case?
http://www.overclock.net/t/689360/cooler-master-310-elite-updated
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but why did you choose this case if you know that the airflow is not that good and you already plan to mod it?!? i don't get it...
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I didn't understand that the case could make so big different on the airflow and read many good reviews about the case and now I have already get it so it's to late to chance
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Don't worry about cutting your case up yet. Put everything together, use good quality thermal compound between your CPU and heat sink (like Arctic Silver) and use your computer for a couple of weeks. Run some free system monitoring software like SpeedFan to keep an eye on things. If you get indications that things are getting too warm, then think about cutting the case.
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