That's not what I see. 775 is not in this list. Both in the Overview and Tech Specs sections.
http://www.corsair.com/us/cpu-cooling-kits/hydro-series-water-cooling-cpu-cooler/hydro-series-h60-high-performance-liquid-cpu-cooler.html
I just checked Corsair's website on the H60. It doesn't list LGA775 as a compatible form factor. I also checked the install guide so that I can get a visual on the parts.
Here's something you could try at your own risk. If you're not getting enough pressure with the supplied standoff screws...
Add washers on the screws. That will shorten the screws and allow you to apply more force to the block when you tighten down.
Make sure that the washers won't touch any surfaces to cause a short. If they will, then use electrical tape between the washer and the surface location of the short.
As a temporary solution, would it be possible to move the printer to a different room on a different circuit? Or, perhaps, run an extension cord from a different circuit to you printer. This should mitigate the problem until the root cause is found and a better solution is implemented. A...
What you need to ask is what projects are using single precision floats vs. double precision floats. Both AMD and nVidia are good for single precision. For double precision, like with some Milkyway@home apps, AMD Radeons are the better cards.
You should google for the comparison charts for...
It looks good. But, you don't need a SSD for this system. Save the money and buy a hard drive. If you need to save power/heat, then get a 2.5" notebook hard disk.
Find out what model server these fit in, then you may be able to find something on IBM's support site for that server model. There should be a maintenance manual somewhere.
I've been reviewing your parts list for a node and have been scratching my head on this. There are ways to save on the per node cost that you haven't explored.
1. Buy an 8-port KVM so that you don't need to buy 5 monitors, 5 keyboards, and 5 mice.
2. Go headless. These are compute nodes, so...
Everyone,
Thanks for the advice. I'll likely grab a Corsair HX1050 for this build. I have easy access locally, and they've been recently marked down in price at some of the places I get parts.
How many watts? I've used some online power calculators, and they all have come up with numbers from 730 to 750 watts as a recommended minimum. I find that a bit low. But, for example, is an 850 watt 80plus silver or gold power supply enough?
I need a recommendation on a power supply. I'm building a machine that will perform Boinc distributed computing jobs on the CPU & GPUs 24x7. Here's the breakdown on the hardware.
CPU: Intel Core i7-2700K Sandy Bridge 3.5GHz LGA 1155 95W Quad-Core Desktop Processor
Mobo: GIGABYTE...
I want to replace the stock heatsink with something more efficient. Quiet is nice. I will not be overclocking. Don't worry about money; I'm looking for options at the moment.
Soon I will be building a server with a socket 1155 Intel Xeon E3-1230 V2 Ivy Bridge processor. Can anyone recommend a good heat pipe heatsink that can fit in a 3U rack chassis?
Thanks
I would like to make a request.
For the active project list on page 1 of this thread, could the owner/moderator add on whether the project requires single precision or double precision computation please? Knowing SP vs. DP will affect what GPUs are purchased for crunching projects.
Thanks :)
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