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"I Need a New PC!" 2015 Part 2. Read the OP. Rocking 2500K's until HBM2 and beyond.

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TheExodu5

Banned
Alright, I'm getting a Mushkin Enhanced Reactor 1TB SSD. I would have went with Samsung, but $270 CAD is an amazing price. Can't pass that up.
 

ISee

Member
So I swallowed the pill and decided to upgrade my old z77/i5 3570k combo and bought an i7 6700k, the asus z170-a motherboard and 16gb of ddr4 3000 ram (should arrive tomorrow, hopefully).

In general what can I expect overclocking wise without having to increase core voltage? And what are reasonable temperatures ?
 

TheExodu5

Banned
Motherboard recommendations for a 6700K? I can do full ATX, but microATX is always preferable in case I ever change cases.

Also, I'm looking at a new cooler to get the most out of my Overclocked. My current case can accommodate a 240mm rad I believe.
 
So I swallowed the pill and decided to upgrade my old z77/i5 3570k combo and bought an i7 6700k, the asus z170-a motherboard and 16gb of ddr4 3000 ram (should arrive tomorrow, hopefully).

In general what can I expect overclocking wise without having to increase core voltage? And what are reasonable temperatures ?

Your motherboard is probably setting the voltage automatically, not fixing it to stock voltage.

Think if you want to leave it on auto, set a fixed voltage, or use adaptive/offset voltages. If possible, use adaptive voltages - it'll only apply raised voltages when your CPU is running beyond stock speeds.

Make sure your CPU doesn't hit over 85C on any core when your CPU fans are at full tilt (100%) - that's where I'd consider the CPU to be at a "Stupid High" temperature - something where stability is no longer guaranteed. Even though there's still some room before throttling occurs, I've seen CPUs that were running at stock speeds fail testing at such high temps.

Motherboard recommendations for a 6700K? I can do full ATX, but microATX is always preferable in case I ever change cases.

Also, I'm looking at a new cooler to get the most out of my Overclocked. My current case can accommodate a 240mm rad I believe.

Want something with more than enough fan headers to handle any AIO cooler setup? This Gigabyte m-ATX board will do!

Pick your Micro-ATX motherboard from either of these if you're not a fan of Gigabyte. They have only two case fan headers, though, so if you do opt for a 240mm radiator AIO or custom loop, make sure you can somehow power all the fans, and the pump, and any case fans you need to use.

This should be more than good enough if you want an AIO cooler. Do note that the thermal paste is pre-applied; if you think you might need to reinstall it, get another tube of thermal paste that's not Arctic Silver 5.
 
Is the 4GB 960 worth it over te 2GB version? I read some of people saying it wasn't becasue that VGA couldn't use the 4GB.

The 4GB version prevents the video card from having its frame times suffer in certain VRAM-heavy games, and indeed does let you use much better texturing settings than normally can be done on the 2GB version.

How much more expensive is the 4GB card over the 2GB?
 

TheExodu5

Banned
I picked up the Gigabyte Gaming 5 Z170 but now I'm considering exchanging it for something else. The NewEgg reviews are pretty terrible. Lots of RMA's.
 
I picked up the Gigabyte Gaming 5 Z170 but now I'm considering exchanging it for something else. The NewEgg reviews are pretty terrible. Lots of RMA's.

If there's an unusual amount of RMAs, it might be a good idea to exchange it.

I think you might be forced to go ATX at the moment, since it does seem like Z170 motherboards with enough fan headers are rare.

What are essential programs to install after completing your PC build?

After finishing Windows installation, drop in your motherboard's driver DVD, and install everything that is a driver or your motherboard's utility software. (There's usually an "install everything" button, but they usually also install bundle-ware.) Do that first before anything else. (Usually, I'd use the provided drivers in the DVD before relying on downloaded versions.)

Then install video card drivers and utilities (from this point on it's perfectly OK to use downloaded drivers instead).

Then, well, everything else. Remember to defrag once everything is done and you've updated Windows to the latest it can if you have HDDs.
 

TheExodu5

Banned
I went ahead with the Asus Maximus VIII Gene. I figured I'll try a high end board for once. We'll see how it goes.

I can always use splitters for my fans.
 

hohoXD123

Member
Any reason I should avoid buying components through flubit? If something goes wrong I still have the manufacturers warranty right?

Also, was thinking of getting a Noctua D15 which seems pretty massive, but my Fractal Define R4 case is pretty big too, planning to pair it with an Asus Z170A, I'm assuming there will be enough room for the fan? Just want to make sure.
 

Weevilone

Member
Any reason I should avoid buying components through flubit? If something goes wrong I still have the manufacturers warranty right?

I am not familiar with that retailer, but I've not had great luck with PC component RMA's. The last time I had an Asus board break, they wore me out and I just recycled it and bought a new one. Had a Sandisk 960GB Extreme Pro go sideways and they basically did the same thing to me. Unless you have extra components laying around and are willing to work for it, you can be down a month or something if things don't go well. Obviously some manufacturers will be better than others, and everyone won't have the shit experience I did, but the potential is there.
 
Also, best way to clean it and keep it dust free?

Edit: thanks Noivern :)

Cases with air filters (any decent case worth their salt will have them in all intakes, minimum), maintaining positive pressure (more intakes than exhaust, but with the stipulation of minimum one exhaust), don't put the computer on the floor, making sure top vents are always filled with exhaust fans if possible...

Need to blow out existing dust? Unplug everything and blow at it with something that can produce large streams of air. I think compressed air works, as are powered air blowers. Don't use a vacuum cleaner! Some hair dryers that can have the heating element disabled and have a strong fan for blowing might work too...

I went ahead with the Asus Maximus VIII Gene. I figured I'll try a high end board for once. We'll see how it goes.

I can always use splitters for my fans.

Just remember to use splitters for only same model fans on the same row for best results, and don't let the combined load exceed what your motherboard header can provide.

That board? Nice! You'll be set for the life of the system.

I am not familiar with that retailer, but I've not had great luck with PC component RMA's. The last time I had an Asus board break, they wore me out and I just recycled it and bought a new one. Had a Sandisk 960GB Extreme Pro go sideways and they basically did the same thing to me. Unless you have extra components laying around and are willing to work for it, you can be down a month or something if things don't go well. Obviously some manufacturers will be better than others, and everyone won't have the shit experience I did, but the potential is there.

Seems like Asus really has bad RMA service on the USA, a completely different experience to what I have had here in Singapore and Malaysia. Eep.
 

Oxn

Member
Okay, so in anticipation for new GPUs, I think I'm going to go ahead and upgrade from my 2500K. 6700K seems like the solid choice. Good idea? Or no? Also looking to upgrade from my 240GB OCZ Vertex 3. Maybe a 1TB SSD. What are some good candidates?

I bought a 1tb samsung evo a month ago and it has been working good.
 

ethomaz

Banned
I picked up the Gigabyte Gaming 5 Z170 but now I'm considering exchanging it for something else. The NewEgg reviews are pretty terrible. Lots of RMA's.
Really I just finished my purchases :(

Edit - Are you talking about GA-Z170X-GAMING 5 or GA-Z170MX-GAMING 5??? I got the first.
 

LilJoka

Member
Newegg reviews are only full of RMAs, so its not of any use.
All parts have some %age that are DOA.

Ive yet to read any sort of user review on boards and never had anything DOA.
 

ethomaz

Banned
Newegg reviews are only full of RMAs, so its not of any use.
All parts have some %age that are DOA.

Ive yet to read any sort of user review on boards and never had anything DOA.
They already posted my mobo with prevision to delivery on Monday... I will test it.

I checked NewEgg... 3 RMAs vs 9 good reviews... mine is the ATX version (Z170X).
 

nicoga3000

Saint Nic
Sry dude, somehow missed this.

Watch these 2 videos on overclocking the CPU.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2cp5wPNUshw
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7mL...ew-vl&list=PLZT_SZiFdpElbG0yfJxJpQ6NWUnf2wXs8

For the GPU, it's much easier.

Download MSI Afterburner, see this vid.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VIzICd3mnc8

Sry can't really talk in details, at work, post more questions if you still need help.

Thanks for this. I'll start tinkering this evening.
 

Lashley

Why does he wear the mask!?
Well, got my new PC sorted :D

Thanks to all the advice on here, took it on board.

GTX 970
i5-6600k
Water cooled
8gb ram (will get another 8gb soon)
SSD and 2tb HDD

13122941_469203666609390_7253711278242688074_o.jpg

Excited to game on it :
 

ethomaz

Banned
New PC build finally finished... all parts purchased... starting to mount next week.

PCPartPicker part list

CPU: Intel Core i3-6100 3.7GHz Dual-Core Processor (Purchased For R$688.00)
Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-Z170X-Gaming 5 ATX LGA1151 Motherboard (Purchased For R$1020.00)
Memory: G.Skill Ripjaws V Series 16GB (2 x 8GB) DDR4-3200 Memory (Purchased For R$567.00)
Storage: Samsung 850 EVO-Series 250GB 2.5" Solid State Drive (Purchased For R$519.43)
Case: Corsair SPEC-02 ATX Mid Tower Case (Purchased For R$439.90)
Power Supply: Corsair RMx 550W 80+ Gold Certified Fully-Modular ATX Power Supply (Purchased For R$719.90)
Total: R$3954.23
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2016-04-29 14:37 EDT-0400

Forecast
Late 2016: New NVidia/AMD GPU
2017/2018: 4-core Intel CPU K (Skylake successor)
 

LilJoka

Member
New PC build finally finished... all parts purchased... starting to mount next week.

PCPartPicker part list

CPU: Intel Core i3-6100 3.7GHz Dual-Core Processor (Purchased For R$688.00)
Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-Z170X-Gaming 5 ATX LGA1151 Motherboard (Purchased For R$1020.00)
Memory: G.Skill Ripjaws V Series 16GB (2 x 8GB) DDR4-3200 Memory (Purchased For R$567.00)
Storage: Samsung 850 EVO-Series 250GB 2.5" Solid State Drive (Purchased For R$519.43)
Case: Corsair SPEC-02 ATX Mid Tower Case (Purchased For R$439.90)
Power Supply: Corsair RMx 550W 80+ Gold Certified Fully-Modular ATX Power Supply (Purchased For R$719.90)
Total: R$3954.23
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2016-04-29 14:37 EDT-0400

Any reason you didn't go ITX or mATX? Most of that case will be empty space.
 

ISee

Member
Your motherboard is probably setting the voltage automatically, not fixing it to stock voltage.

Think if you want to leave it on auto, set a fixed voltage, or use adaptive/offset voltages. If possible, use adaptive voltages - it'll only apply raised voltages when your CPU is running beyond stock speeds.

Make sure your CPU doesn't hit over 85C on any core when your CPU fans are at full tilt (100%) - that's where I'd consider the CPU to be at a "Stupid High" temperature - something where stability is no longer guaranteed. Even though there's still some room before throttling occurs, I've seen CPUs that were running at stock speeds fail testing at such high temps.

Great thx for the info.
 

TheExodu5

Banned
Alright.

Parts purchased:

Asus Maximus VIII Gene Micro ATX motherboard
Intel Core i7 6700K
G.Skill 2x8GB DDR4-3200 (I know I didn't need to spend that much, but it was $25 more for a color scheme I liked :s)
Mushkin Reactor 1TB SSD
Corsair H100i v2

Reusing:
2x2TB Samsung HDDs
Lian-Li V700B
NVidia GTX 680 (waiting on Pascal)
Corsair AX850

I'm thinking of picking up a Micro ATX case, since I can essentially keep my 2500K system as a second PC.

Any suggestions for a Micro ATX case? I'm looking for the following criteria:

- Support for a 240mm rad (Corsair H100)
- Side window
- Optimal setup with positive airflow with the Corsair H100
- Air filters over intakes with a positive airflow setup
- Quiet is a bonus
- Smaller is a bonus.
- No CD drive necessary
- Easy cable management
- Toolless is a bonus, but not necessary.
 

TheExodu5

Banned
Going by my own criteria the Fractal Arc Mini R2 is a solid choice, but I'm looking to see if there are any more refined options I may have missed.

Also the 5.25" drive bays are a waste of space. It would be nice if I could mount the H100 in the front of the case and still have space for 1-2 HDDs as well as my SSD. Is this possible? Then I could intake from the back and top directly onto the VRMs which could help overclocking.

Or maybe the H100 on top would be just fine. Then I could remove 1 HDD cage and get good airflow over my GPU. Yeah, that's probably the more sensible choice.

My main issue with the Arc Mini is that it just doesn't look very nice.

The Corsair 350D is on sale. Hmmm, could do that.
 

ethomaz

Banned
Any reason you didn't go ITX or mATX? Most of that case will be empty space.
Well It is my first time mounting a PC so I guessed it will be easy with more space and I really liked the case.

I have a HDD 3.5" and a DVD-Player 3.5" to add (from my old PC) and until late 2016 I will put a big GPU.

To tell you I didn't have ideia how much free space I have... I never did that before :D
 

TheExodu5

Banned
Okay, the Bitfenix Pandora looks pretty nice!

Edit: seems like a nice looking case, but poorly thought out.

I'll also stop talking to myself for now.
 

Vuze

Member
Alright, RMA'd 970 came back unexpected today and the new case came in as well (Corsair 400C) so I decided to move the build over from my old-ass case. I think I'm already regretting the window, what a dust magnet :s But it looks pretty with the decent white LED strip (first time I use one), nice showcase.

What's the best way to fixate these strips? I haven't had any double-sided tape around so I just put it in the case loosely for now. Also, any tips how to quickly clean the window or keep it somewhat dust free in the first place?

Anyway, building was harder than expected mainly because of the hard drive bay cover they've got going on but also because space at the rear gets really tight if you decide to use all SSD slots (3) and HDD slots (2)... I could barely make the lid close and should really look into getting rid of at least one SATA power cable soon so I don't bend the back cover.

I assume it's fine to use SATA power extensions for HDD/SSD? Should suffice so I can pull the third SATA branch from my PSU.


Also can't wait to buy an AIO water cooling solution for my CPU, whilst super effective, the Noctua fans are just super ugly.
 
I like the Noctua fan designs personally. They look classy and handsome.

I'm not familiar with that case -- can you rotate the SSDs (and their mounts) 180 degrees so you can hook them up from the bottom?
 

Vuze

Member
If I'm not mistaken they are fixed. Turning the SSDs themselves around won't work (I guess) since there are springs at the bottom of each slot.

Oh, I was talking about the standard colors (beige-brown) and meager selection of colors in general btw, not the design.
 

Momentary

Banned
I wish Intel and NVIDIA would hurry the hell up with these new processors

I'm still torn as to building or having someone else build it. I want a hard line loop and don't really want to do it myself, but at the same time I don't want to pay a 50% mark up.

If I do buy a pre-built? So far I've looked at Falcon, Origin, and Digital Storm. Any other boutiques I should look at?
 

teiresias

Member
mITX Z170 seem fairly lacking. I'm wondering whether I'm going to just stick to 4790k, with a Z97, and DDR3 for my HTPC gaming PC build.
 

Oxn

Member
I wish Intel and NVIDIA would hurry the hell up with these new processors

I'm still torn as to building or having someone else build it. I want a hard line loop and don't really want to do it myself, but at the same time I don't want to pay a 50% mark up.

If I do buy a pre-built? So far I've looked at Falcon, Origin, and Digital Storm. Any other boutiques I should look at?

Maingear.

Ibuypower is cheaper than all of them but i hear bad things.
 

dealer-

Member
390, and yeah, it should look good if you're thinking of doing it now. Though it is a bad time to buy a new high-end video card in general if the rumours are worth anything, though.

You can always leave out the video card and wing it with Intel integrated for the time being. Even though the HD 530 is a lot weaker than a high-end video card, it should work well within the Windows desktop, and most popular online video games (think DOTA2, CS:GO, most MMOs, Rocket League, that kinda thing.) I believe you can even stretch the integrated graphics to play current-gen games, though at potato settings.

Make sure that you like the case's looks first. If you don't like it, do advise.

Also, no SSD, since seeking parity with offered rig (2TB HDD). Do you think you want an SSD instead?

Just the 2TB will be fine for now, I might add a SSD in over the summer. I'm just going to leave out the video card for now and see how things stand in two/three months. Thanks for the help. :)
 

catabarez

Member
Are there any high performance 140mm LED fans? Or should I just go for Noctua or Corsair? I'm looking to replace my intake fan from the stock 200mm LED to something with better performance.
 

appaws

Banned
DDC and my case has no sound dampening at all. It's a bit whiny because I have to run it at full speed (molex and h67 motherboard didn't push enough juice on the fan header)

Ah. Yeah, DDC pumps have that certain higher pitch that is more audible. D5's have a lower sort of hum that I think blends in better with background/fan noises.
 

TheExodu5

Banned
Alright, decided on the Bitfenix Pandora black with window.

The main downside to it is that it has very little room for cable management. But I have a modular PSU with little hardware so hopefully I can manage.
 
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