well, I did tell him he had to clean the filters when he vacums, and the inside of the computer about once a year. But it had only been 10months and his computer had way to much dust already, I just need to seal that case somehow
About 10 months ago I built a budget PC for my friend, and I used a Corsair 300r.
The case comes with an intake 120mm at the front and an exhaust 120mm at the back. I added another 120mm intake at the front, plus another 120mm exhaust at the top.
Couple days ago I went to his place to fix...
Step1) I already know the multiplier / voltage I want, I found out in the Asus Suite
Step2) This is exactly what I'm asking in this thread. How can I make automated functions to get me the voltage I want..?
Step3) Damn dude.. I have no idea what C3 and C6 are..?
no, regular = 0%, and by default it's set to auto, which selects the regular.
And yeah I could probably get the O/C I want using the oldschool manual voltage, but my computer uses around +110watts when just running a prime95 run. It's powered on 24/7 so using offset mode would save me a good amount
Well put this simply here is my setup :
CPU : 3770k
Mobo: Asus z77 sabertooth
Cooler : noctua nh-d14
Case : CM Haf-X
I did a simple overclock in offset mode using a 45multiplier.
Result: The CPU runs at around 74-79degrees celcius under prime95 load. CPU-Z reports a vCore of 1.36-1.37v. Which...
Regardless of what O/C I have, core3 is always much hotter than the rest. Also 4.7 is very healthy right now with a 1.29vcore.
Also the load temps on the screenshot are load temps from IntelBurntest which brings the CPU much hotter than any game I run. Planetside2/Crysis3 and others get me...
I have already made research about the subject and found people saying a 10degrees difference doesn't matter, but the thing is for me core#3 on idle runs 12-20degrees more than the coldest core.
During load the difference is much less, but it is still core#3 that runs from 4 to 12 degrees...
So a co-worker of mine came to me today and told me he wanted a simple desktop computer mostly use for web browsing. He want a fast machine that does just that.
I asked him if he was going to watch/store music and/or videos? He said not.
So I told him he should get a computer with a SSD drive...
My computer has 3 monitors in NVIDIA surround configuration. I also have very special sound settings with my creative X-FI card that I want to use when gaming.
Long story short, I also have my television pluged in my system (pluged with HDMI and has to be disabled for NVIDIA Surround to work)...
I got this CORSAIR Professional Series HX1050 1050W PSU, to power up my new rig.. basically Intel 3770k IVY with dual GTX 670 sli.
Whenever my computer is under heavy GPU load, the PSU starts doing some weird sound. And it's really just under HEAVY GPU load.
Video convertion / Prime 95= no...
I understand that..
But with my Bloomfield i7 930, when I was overclocking it, in the post screen it would show the right clock.. i7 930 @ 3.9ghz
Guess they changed that microcode...
Ok heres what I did..
Unchecked the box completly.. rebooted. Now the option is back from 1 to 8. And CPU-ID shows 4 cores
Now should I put 8 cores.. ? isn't the 3770k a 4cores cpu..?
edit: yea switched the option to 8 cores, and CPU-ID shows I have 4 cores.. I'm so confused
Wow that's weird, I switched it back to default value : 1.
Rebooted.. and now I'm at 1 core.. but I can't change the option anymore!
http://i.imgur.com/SvleW.png
CPU-Z shows 1 core, and Real Temp only reports temp from one core
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