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Mort Eveson
Gallente Intaki Liberation Front Intaki Prosperity Initiative
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Posted - 2010.08.18 17:26:00 -
[1]
Hi all, not sure if this is the right place to post, but here goes:
I'm buying a new PC and was wondering if getting 2 graphics cards is worth it?(I know I should build my own, but never done it before and want it fairly fast).
The basic set up comes with a 1GB ATI Radeon HD5750. For a similar price I can upgrade that to: 2x 1GB ATI Radeon HD5750 - CrossFireX Configuration or 1 x 1GB NVIDIA Geforce GTX465 with CUDA Graphics Accelerator or for a little more 1 x 1GB ATI Radeon HD5850 Graphics Accelerator
Eve is the only graphs intensive program I run (and even then isn't huge), I mainly play strategy games (e.g. the total war series).
I'll post the whole set up if it helps, or if I get lots of replies.
Thanks,
Mort.
P.S. the system comes with a 700W X-Power power supply, will this be sufficient/any good?
""
Visit us on http://www.ilfcorp.com/ |

dr doooo
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Posted - 2010.08.18 17:42:00 -
[2]
I wouldn't have thought so. How can you get a set up with 2 HD5750 for a similar price to a set up with just one?
I guess you've had a look at Tom's Hardwares gpu recomendations. That site will give you an idea of relative performance of 2 cheaper cards verses on better one. You could of course add another card at a later date if you needed it (and had a suitable mobo), but unless you are playing Eve at huge resolutions, I can't see that you'll need it or see any noticeable difference.
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Mort Eveson
Gallente Intaki Liberation Front Intaki Prosperity Initiative
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Posted - 2010.08.18 17:48:00 -
[3]
Oh sorry, I meant the 2 x Radeon HD5750 was a similar price to the Geforce GTX465. Editing the OP now ""
Visit us on http://www.ilfcorp.com/ |

ReaperOfSly
Gallente 1st Cavalry Division Circle-Of-Two
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Posted - 2010.08.18 18:37:00 -
[4]
Honestly, I'd just go for the single card, simply because it takes up less room in the case and will therefore be likely to run cooler.
But if the most graphically demanding thing you run is Eve, you'll be able to get away with just one of those 5750s. ____________________
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Exploding Tukey
Gallente Capital Construction Research Pioneer Alliance
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Posted - 2010.08.18 18:47:00 -
[5]
No.
single 5870 with a slot for a second 5870 when the prices drop.
Stop buying economy cards, especially two of them.
<Signature Type="Clever" Width=100% Height=5 Edible="No" /> |

Reiisha
Evolution IT Alliance
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Posted - 2010.08.18 19:03:00 -
[6]
Get a single 5870.
You don't need more.
"If you do things right, people won't be sure you've done anything at all"
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dr doooo
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Posted - 2010.08.18 19:11:00 -
[7]
Originally by: Exploding Tukey No.
single 5870 with a slot for a second 5870 when the prices drop.
Stop buying economy cards, especially two of them.
You are joking, right?? For playing Eve? I suppose if the op had a 32" monitor.... but then again 2 5750's in crossfire would perform better and cost a fair chunk less.
If I were the op, I would probably upgrade a little to a single 5770, and also spend maybe the extra 10 or 20 quid for a full crossfire motherboard, just in case I wanted to add a second card at a later date. I don't think anyone ever actually ends up adding a second card later on (at least I never have), but it's only a little more for the mobo, and it's nice to have the option.
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Reiisha
Evolution IT Alliance
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Posted - 2010.08.18 19:38:00 -
[8]
Originally by: dr doooo
Originally by: Exploding Tukey No.
single 5870 with a slot for a second 5870 when the prices drop.
Stop buying economy cards, especially two of them.
You are joking, right?? For playing Eve? I suppose if the op had a 32" monitor.... but then again 2 5750's in crossfire would perform better and cost a fair chunk less.
If I were the op, I would probably upgrade a little to a single 5770, and also spend maybe the extra 10 or 20 quid for a full crossfire motherboard, just in case I wanted to add a second card at a later date. I don't think anyone ever actually ends up adding a second card later on (at least I never have), but it's only a little more for the mobo, and it's nice to have the option.
No need for two cards. It's for 'enthusiasts' only. Both Crossfire and SLI are barely supported by the manufacturers themselves, let alone games.
A single 5870 will serve you fine for the next few years. By the time you want to upgrade it, the newer generation, single GPU cards will be faster than 2 5870's, let alone 5770's.
There is absolutely no point in getting a dual gpu setup, especially not as a casual/mmo gamer.
Or to put it in another way: If you're not sure whether you should get a dual gpu setup, you shouldn't get one. Don't get it unless you're absolutely sure about it.
"If you do things right, people won't be sure you've done anything at all"
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dr doooo
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Posted - 2010.08.18 20:43:00 -
[9]
Originally by: Reiisha
Originally by: dr doooo
You are joking, right?? For playing Eve? I suppose if the op had a 32" monitor.... but then again 2 5750's in crossfire would perform better and cost a fair chunk less.
If I were the op, I would probably upgrade a little to a single 5770, and also spend maybe the extra 10 or 20 quid for a full crossfire motherboard, just in case I wanted to add a second card at a later date. I don't think anyone ever actually ends up adding a second card later on (at least I never have), but it's only a little more for the mobo, and it's nice to have the option.
No need for two cards. It's for 'enthusiasts' only. Both Crossfire and SLI are barely supported by the manufacturers themselves, let alone games.
A single 5870 will serve you fine for the next few years. By the time you want to upgrade it, the newer generation, single GPU cards will be faster than 2 5870's, let alone 5770's.
There is absolutely no point in getting a dual gpu setup, especially not as a casual/mmo gamer.
Or to put it in another way: If you're not sure whether you should get a dual gpu setup, you shouldn't get one. Don't get it unless you're absolutely sure about it.
But if you buy a 5870 you a paying the 'early adopter' flagship premium of? well over ú300, and it's total overkill for most people, especially for playing Eve. I'd say that was the 'enthusiast' option. I would guess that the op would be happy with the performance of a single 5750 or 5770, but if for some reason he was not, he could add a second, and it would still be substantially cheaper than a single 5870. I've gone the high end route for gpu's myself in the past, and I can honestly say that I saw no difference when playing eve (on my 20" monitor) between that and middle of the road (and much cheaper) cards.
I also don't get you first point of "Both Crossfire and SLI are barely supported by the manufacturers themselves, let alone games." There is plenty of manufacturer support for crossfire, and in my experience, you are much more likely to run into stability or driver problems with a cutting edge high end card, rather than with a middle of the road crossfire setup. After all, crossfire/sli has been around for several years now. I believe that 5870's had crossfire problems when they first came out, but of course they were the high end cutting edge of gpu's at the time.
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Mort Eveson
Gallente Intaki Liberation Front Intaki Prosperity Initiative
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Posted - 2010.08.18 20:44:00 -
[10]
Thanks all!
From what I've seen so far consensus is that I only need one and that EVE isn't going to be pushing it even then. The HD5870 is an extra ú100 on top of what I was going to spend if I upgraded, so don't think that's going to happen. I think it's agreed that EVE will run find on a HD5770 and by the time they update EVE I'll be able to afford something better :-p.
Therefore my build will be:
Case: XGS Gaming Chassis 6XR9 Motherboard: ASUS M4A89GTD PRO/USB3 TurboV ATX Mainboard - AMD 890GX CrossFireX- AM3, DDR3 Power supply: 950W X-Power Desktop Power Supply Processor: AMD Phenom II X6 1090T Black Edition Processor - 125W AM3 (3.2-3.6GHz) Memory: G.Skill 8GB DDR3 1600MHz Memory (4x 2GB KIt) Graphics card: 1GB ATI Radeon HD5770 Graphics Accelerator Hard Drive: 1TB Serial ATA 2 Hard Drive with 32MB Buffer
Kind of tempted by a solid state drive, since it is apparently quicker for booting windows, but I don't think it's worth it for the extra couple of seconds.
Thanks again guys! ""
Visit us on http://www.ilfcorp.com/ |
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Zeba
Minmatar Honourable East India Trading Company
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Posted - 2010.08.18 20:46:00 -
[11]
Eve doesn't support multiple video cards and by all accounts actually runs worse when using them. This also seems to be true of most other games that don't specifically support multiple cards too so unless you have a game that explicitly supports them just go for a powerful single card.
Originally by: CCP Oveur My milkshake brings all the boys to the yard.
Originally by: CCP Adida Moved from missions and complexes. All other game discussions are only aloud in OOP.
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Freyya
Advanced Planetary Exports Intergalactic Exports Group
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Posted - 2010.08.18 22:00:00 -
[12]
In all seriousness, you're much better off building your own like you said. It doesn't take rocket science skillbooks to figure out what goes where. And usually any bigger webshop has the stuff in supply so you can order it and get it the next 2-3 days. That having said; Usually a prebuilt PC of more than half the companies is loaded with "manufacturer" software and such. Also known as bloatware. Dunno where you're buying it but keep that in mind..it's usually harder to get rid off.
On the build itself; The 5750 is low end to medium. 5770 is medium to enthousiast and best bang for buck in that category. 5830 is really just a downgraded 5850 but with higher W consumption so 5850 is the mainstream enthousiast card with best bang for buck for powerconsumption in that category. Anything up is for the die hard who wants to play on rediculous resolutions (e.g. think 3 24" screens). BTW; the HD5*** series should be dropping in price pretty soon since around November the HD6 series will most likely be released.
About your power supply; Ditch it. Ditch it immediatly. Do it. Now. All the specs on the Cheap ass power supplies is what it can deliver at peak for only a short time. After that it could fry your pc. Get a name PSU like Enermax/Zalman/Tagan etc.. If it's under 50 bucks there's usually a good chance it's utter crap and could fry your pc after a while.(I recommend the be-quiet L7 530 W) They portray specs that are at efficient load and can deliver more @ peak. PSU's run at their best at around 70-80% load so anything that's way above your system powerconsumption is a waste of energy and your system won't suck more than 600 Watt @ normal load. Way less in 98% of the cases.
Solid state drives are usefull if you're impatient and want the best of the best because you have more than enough dough anyways. Under normal use any (i recommend the Samsung spinpoint f3 series) HD is sufficient.
The rest seems to be in good order. The BE AMD proc is usually a good choice since it has good performance for less money than an Intel proc.
GL anyways and enjoy your new pc  ___________
NOW COLLECTING ISD AND CCP AUTOGRAPHS It'll be worth something someday. -Rauth
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Reiisha
Evolution IT Alliance
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Posted - 2010.08.18 22:30:00 -
[13]
Hmm, i stand corrected... 5870 is overkill and a little overpriced. I could have sworn it was cheaper than 300 euros.
A 5770 is very good back for your buck, and a single one will serve you just fine for a long time.
And yeah, power supply has to be good quality, not just quantity. Zalman and Coolermaster come to mind.
"If you do things right, people won't be sure you've done anything at all"
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Mort Eveson
Gallente Intaki Liberation Front Intaki Prosperity Initiative
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Posted - 2010.08.18 23:17:00 -
[14]
Edited by: Mort Eveson on 18/08/2010 23:17:32 Thanks again all!
Hmm so it seems everyone agreed that the X-power PSU is rubbish. I'm going to go through tomorrow and see if I can find all the components to build it myself. No point buying a machine where I'll just have to disconnect everything to put in a new PSU. Will just have to make sure it fits :-p.
The build I was going to have is based off the Slayer Dragon Turboon meshcomputers.com.
I assume I can beat that price by custom building?
I'm going to get some sleep, expect an update on my total lack of knowledge tomorrow.
""
Visit us on http://www.ilfcorp.com/ |

Grez
Empire Assault Corp Dead Terrorists
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Posted - 2010.08.19 00:01:00 -
[15]
Originally by: Reiisha Hmm, i stand corrected... 5870 is overkill and a little overpriced. I could have sworn it was cheaper than 300 euros.
A 5770 is very good back for your buck, and a single one will serve you just fine for a long time.
And yeah, power supply has to be good quality, not just quantity. Zalman and Coolermaster come to mind.
You're probably thinking of the 5850 Reiisha. I got one for my brother and his is waltzing through anything he can throw at it. Absurd levels of AA & AF 4tw. ---
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HerFirefly
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Posted - 2010.08.19 07:05:00 -
[16]
I personally have two in mine. I don't recall what kind, and it's really late at night so I don't feel like checking at the moment. But I've got the cross fired and it runs beautifully. I've never had any sort of problem with any games as far as graphics go. Now compatibility with Windows 7? That's another story...... lol The Insane Pen! http://theinsanepen.blogspot.com/
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Anddeh McNab
Matari Department of Gun Control
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Posted - 2010.08.19 09:12:00 -
[17]
Originally by: Reiisha
No need for two cards. It's for 'enthusiasts' only. Both Crossfire and SLI are barely supported by the manufacturers themselves, let alone games.
Lies. Everything is faster with two. I get to work to work twice as fast driving two cars.
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Mort Eveson
Gallente Intaki Liberation Front Intaki Prosperity Initiative
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Posted - 2010.08.19 16:29:00 -
[18]
Edited by: Mort Eveson on 19/08/2010 16:32:46
Originally by: Anddeh McNab
Originally by: Reiisha
No need for two cards. It's for 'enthusiasts' only. Both Crossfire and SLI are barely supported by the manufacturers themselves, let alone games.
Lies. Everything is faster with two. I get to work to work twice as fast driving two cars.
I can only assume you work in a hospital :-p.
Just back from work and very briefly looked at building it myself on overclockers, slightly cheaper I think, but not added in the cost of buying windows (7 pro 64bit). Still deciding between building myself or buying and replacing PSU. Is Corsair a good brand for a PSU?
Again I apologise for being a total noob in the PC building department. ""
Visit us on http://www.ilfcorp.com/ |

Vogue
Skynet Nexus
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Posted - 2010.08.19 16:32:00 -
[19]
An issue with dual graphics cards is the sheer amount of heat they emit. You need a big case with good air flow - sucking in and front and out at rear.
.................................................. Cylon cultural victor! |

SupaKudoRio
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Posted - 2010.08.19 16:45:00 -
[20]
Edited by: SupaKudoRio on 19/08/2010 16:49:54 You really have no reason to have dual graphics cards if EVE is the most demanding thing you're going to run on it.
I'd dare say you could even downgrade without any noticeable performance loss.
Who said anything about buying Windows 7... I'd give you a link, but the mods wouldn't like that.
Ye'llo? |
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Mort Eveson
Gallente Intaki Liberation Front Intaki Prosperity Initiative
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Posted - 2010.08.19 17:22:00 -
[21]
Originally by: SupaKudoRio Edited by: SupaKudoRio on 19/08/2010 16:49:54 You really have no reason to have dual graphics cards if EVE is the most demanding thing you're going to run on it.
I'd dare say you could even downgrade without any noticeable performance loss.
Who said anything about buying Windows 7... I'd give you a link, but the mods wouldn't like that.
I have a plan involving an OLD HD with XP on it and a cheap upgrade CD but need to research if it will work :-p ""
Visit us on http://www.ilfcorp.com/ |

SupaKudoRio
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Posted - 2010.08.19 18:11:00 -
[22]
Originally by: Mort Eveson I have a plan involving an OLD HD with XP on it and a cheap upgrade CD but need to research if it will work :-p.
Old HD in new system, boot from XP, insert upgrade CD, install to new HD, remove old HD...sounds simple...
I doubt that would work. Far as I know, you can only get a cheap upgrade if you have Vista.
Try it, though! I could be mistaken.
Ye'llo? |

Joe Phoenix
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Posted - 2010.08.19 19:01:00 -
[23]
Probably.
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SupaKudoRio
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Posted - 2010.08.19 19:15:00 -
[24]
Originally by: Joe Phoenix Probably.
I'm no tech guru, but I'm certainly more qualified than you. 
I'm not entirely sure because I've been plodding along with XP to wait out the new OS' growing pains. I'm glad I did, too, Vista was truly terrible.
Ye'llo? |

dr doooo
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Posted - 2010.08.19 20:47:00 -
[25]
Originally by: Mort Eveson Edited by: Mort Eveson on 19/08/2010 18:54:14 Edited by: Mort Eveson on 19/08/2010 17:57:27
Originally by: SupaKudoRio Edited by: SupaKudoRio on 19/08/2010 16:49:54 You really have no reason to have dual graphics cards if EVE is the most demanding thing you're going to run on it.
I'd dare say you could even downgrade without any noticeable performance loss.
Who said anything about buying Windows 7... I'd give you a link, but the mods wouldn't like that.
I have a plan involving an OLD HD with XP on it and a cheap upgrade CD but need to research if it will work :-p.
Old HD in new system, boot from XP, insert upgrade CD, install to new HD, remove old HD...sounds simple...
EDIT
Looking at this I think the OS will have a fit and complain when I move it between machines.
If you still have the old XP code/cd, then that shouldn't be a problem afaik. Just stick your old HD in, do a repair install, and then all being more or less ok, upgrade to windows 7 . I've never done this specific thing myself, but afaik you only need one integral part of your old rig to do a repair install of xp, and xp or Vista can upgrade to 7.
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Viktor Fyretracker
Caldari Fyretracker Heavy Industries
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Posted - 2010.08.19 20:48:00 -
[26]
Two Cards, One Power Supply...
id suggest maybe 850w or 900w just to give a buffer.
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Mort Eveson
Gallente Intaki Liberation Front Intaki Prosperity Initiative
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Posted - 2010.08.19 22:52:00 -
[27]
So the plan is now...
Case: Thermaltake VK60001W2Z Element S Case PSU: Corsair TX 650W ATX SLi Compliant Power Supply Mb: ASUS M4A89GTD PRO/USB3 - motherboard - ATX - AMD 890GX CPU: AMD Phenom II X6 Six Core 1090T Black Edition 3.20GHz (Socket AM3) RAM:Corsair Dominator 8GB (4x2GB) DDR3 12800C8 (1600MHz) Dual-Channel Kit GPU: Asus ATI Radeon HD 5770 CuCore 1024MB GDDR5 PCI-Express Graphics Card HD: Samsung SpinPoint F3 1TB SATA-II 32MB Cache DVD: Sony Optiarc DRU-870S 24x DVD¦RW SATA ReWriter
Comes out at about the same as the pre-built kit but everything is a good brand (I think). Now just to sort out the OS.
""
Visit us on http://www.ilfcorp.com/ |

SupaKudoRio
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Posted - 2010.08.19 23:02:00 -
[28]
Originally by: Mort Eveson Comes out at about the same as the pre-built kit but everything is a good brand (I think). Now just to sort out the OS.
Check your eve-mail on that character, I have a solution to that for you.
Ye'llo? |

David Grogan
Gallente
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Posted - 2010.08.19 23:27:00 -
[29]
Originally by: Mort Eveson So the plan is now...
Case: Thermaltake VK60001W2Z Element S Case PSU: Corsair TX 650W ATX SLi Compliant Power Supply Mb: ASUS M4A89GTD PRO/USB3 - motherboard - ATX - AMD 890GX CPU: AMD Phenom II X6 Six Core 1090T Black Edition 3.20GHz (Socket AM3) RAM:Corsair Dominator 8GB (4x2GB) DDR3 12800C8 (1600MHz) Dual-Channel Kit GPU: Asus ATI Radeon HD 5770 CuCore 1024MB GDDR5 PCI-Express Graphics Card HD: Samsung SpinPoint F3 1TB SATA-II 32MB Cache DVD: Sony Optiarc DRU-870S 24x DVD¦RW SATA ReWriter
Comes out at about the same as the pre-built kit but everything is a good brand (I think). Now just to sort out the OS.
only use that dominator ram with the add on cooler fans that attaches to it.
it gets really hot without it Dominator ram cooling fans
SIG: if my message has spelling errors its cos i fail at typing properly :P |

Freyya
Advanced Planetary Exports Intergalactic Exports Group
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Posted - 2010.08.20 07:24:00 -
[30]
Edited by: Freyya on 20/08/2010 07:26:44 Corsair is a good brand yes. And really, the dominator memory is fun and all but any other kingston hyperx / OCZ Gold or Platinum series will do just fine for 1/2 the price in most occasions. Just keep an eye on speed and latency. Google is your friend my friend. Other than that it's a nice system this way. ___________
NOW COLLECTING ISD AND CCP AUTOGRAPHS It'll be worth something someday. -Rauth
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Mort Eveson
Gallente Intaki Liberation Front Intaki Prosperity Initiative
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Posted - 2010.08.20 10:11:00 -
[31]
Edited by: Mort Eveson on 20/08/2010 12:16:41
Originally by: Freyya Edited by: Freyya on 20/08/2010 07:26:44 Corsair is a good brand yes. And really, the dominator memory is fun and all but any other kingston hyperx / OCZ Gold or Platinum series will do just fine for 1/2 the price in most occasions. Just keep an eye on speed and latency. Google is your friend my friend. Other than that it's a nice system this way.
OK cool, thanks. Attempting to find 8gb in a 2x4gb set up is more difficult that it should be :-p. I want to use a 4x2GB rather than 2x4GB kit so that when i next upgrade (probably along with the graphics card(I'm thinking a couple of years down the line)) I can just add in another lot of 2x4GB.
EDIT
What I want is: G.SKILL Ripjaws Series 8GB (2 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1600 (PC3 12800) Desktop Memory Model F3-12800CL9D-8GBRL However failing to find it in the UK, so will probably go with: G.Skill RipJaw 8GB (2x4GB) DDR3 PC3-10666C9 1333MHz Dual Channel Kit [F3-10666CL9D-8GBRL]
""
Visit us on http://www.ilfcorp.com/ |

Mort Eveson
Gallente Intaki Liberation Front Intaki Prosperity Initiative
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Posted - 2010.08.22 18:30:00 -
[32]
For anyone who still cares, my set up will be:
Case: Thermaltake VK60001W2Z Element S PSU: Corsair Professional Series HX750W Motherboard: ASUS M4A89GTD PRO/USB3ATX - AMD 890GX CPU: AMD Phenom II X6 Six Core 1090T Black Edition 3.20GHz GPU: Asus ATI Radeon HD 5770 CuCore 1024MB GDDR5 PCI-Express Graphics Card RAM: G.Skill RipJaw 8GB (2x4GB) DDR3 PC3-10666C9 1333MHz Dual Channel Kit HDD: Samsung SpinPoint F3 1TB SATA-II 32MB Cache Optical drive: Sony Optiarc DRU-870S 24x DVD¦RW SATA ReWriter
I think / hope that's everything i need to buy, hopefully have it built by the end of the week.
Thanks again to everyone (unless of course, this being eve, you've sabotaged my PC building so I wont be able to play eve :-p).
""
Visit us on http://www.ilfcorp.com/ |

dr doooo
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Posted - 2010.08.22 22:04:00 -
[33]
Edited by: dr doooo on 22/08/2010 22:06:30 very nice rig!
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Freyya
Advanced Planetary Exports Intergalactic Exports Group
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Posted - 2010.08.23 09:59:00 -
[34]
Yup, that rig will work just dandy like that. Enough headroom to upgrade and all. GL buidling it and remember to build it on top of something non-static, wear clothes that can't get a static charge and touch bare grounded metal before you touch any of the electric components...ohh and don't forget to put the motherboard spacers in the case before mounting the MB! You wouldn't be the 1st.. ;) ___________
NOW COLLECTING ISD AND CCP AUTOGRAPHS It'll be worth something someday. -Rauth
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SupaKudoRio
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Posted - 2010.08.23 10:23:00 -
[35]
Let us know how it goes. 
And here's a handy guide. It's getting out of date now, but much of it still applies.
Ye'llo? |

Jerreie
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Posted - 2010.08.23 10:25:00 -
[36]
Quote: I'm buying a new PC and was wondering if getting 2 graphics cards is worth it
I've got two 480s just so I can say I do, but performance-wise? Not unless you want to fraps Crysis on 2560x1600 with ever slider set to I HAVE TOO MUCH MONEY.
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Ratnix Foisen
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Posted - 2010.08.23 16:58:00 -
[37]
Edited by: Ratnix Foisen on 23/08/2010 17:03:00 Others have already answered your question and you are pretty set on that but I would like to throw my 2 cents in on why to have 2 cards.
My system originally had 2 cards and I upgraded it a couple of years ago with a newer card. While I haven't gotten a second card for it yet, seeing as this card is more than 2 years out of date I still plan on getting 2 newer cards. The reason for doing this is for Multi-monitors. I currently run dual monitors and plan on going to at least 3. Four would be my goal but that will require a much bigger desk.
At the very least I suggest running dual monitors. With a game like Eve, doing this is almost necessary unless you are actually doing PvP or some other task that I don't know about that requires your complete undivided attention.
Originally by: Vogue An issue with dual graphics cards is the sheer amount of heat they emit. You need a big case with good air flow - sucking in and front and out at rear.
You actually would also want the hot air being blown out the top of the case. Hot air raises. Even with good air flow in the front and out the back you will still have hot air at the top of the case. And depending on the type of case, with the PSU being at the top, having an exhaust fan at the top will do wonders for keeping the case cooler.
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BrundleMeth
Caldari Temporal Mechanics
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Posted - 2010.08.24 16:35:00 -
[38]
Personally I would not bother with any video card. Just let your imagination provide the graphics...
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Freyya
Advanced Planetary Exports Intergalactic Exports Group
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Posted - 2010.08.25 11:57:00 -
[39]
Originally by: Ratnix Foisen Edited by: Ratnix Foisen on 23/08/2010 17:03:00 Others have already answered your question and you are pretty set on that but I would like to throw my 2 cents in on why to have 2 cards.
My system originally had 2 cards and I upgraded it a couple of years ago with a newer card. While I haven't gotten a second card for it yet, seeing as this card is more than 2 years out of date I still plan on getting 2 newer cards. The reason for doing this is for Multi-monitors. I currently run dual monitors and plan on going to at least 3. Four would be my goal but that will require a much bigger desk.
At the very least I suggest running dual monitors. With a game like Eve, doing this is almost necessary unless you are actually doing PvP or some other task that I don't know about that requires your complete undivided attention.
Originally by: Vogue An issue with dual graphics cards is the sheer amount of heat they emit. You need a big case with good air flow - sucking in and front and out at rear.
You actually would also want the hot air being blown out the top of the case. Hot air raises. Even with good air flow in the front and out the back you will still have hot air at the top of the case. And depending on the type of case, with the PSU being at the top, having an exhaust fan at the top will do wonders for keeping the case cooler.
it's called ATi Eyefinity and can provide 3 screens on 1 display (1 of which needs to be displayport) or even eyefinity6 for 6 screens on 1 card. Google is your friend ___________
NOW COLLECTING ISD AND CCP AUTOGRAPHS It'll be worth something someday. -Rauth
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Ratnix Foisen
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Posted - 2010.08.25 16:00:00 -
[40]
Originally by: Freyya it's called ATi Eyefinity and can provide 3 screens on 1 display (1 of which needs to be displayport) or even eyefinity6 for 6 screens on 1 card. Google is your friend
Ok, I googled it and I can't say I am impressed. You are limited to the number of ports that the card has. Which is no different that the setup I have now. I have 2 DVI outputs on my 4 year old card which is what my 2 monitors are running. So unless I am missing something that has half a dozen outputs on the cards I see no difference than my old cards. The only thing I see that the eyefinity allows you to do is have all your montiors work as a single monitor, which means nothing to me. Personally I don't want one giant monitor, I want more workspace. I would rather not have big breaks in my workspace from the edge of the monitors. As I said, from what I just read and watched, I saw nothing that allows you to hook up more monitors than the outputs on the card have. Which is why you have multiple cards, to allow you to have more outputs.
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Freyya
Advanced Planetary Exports Intergalactic Exports Group
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Posted - 2010.08.26 07:29:00 -
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Edited by: Freyya on 26/08/2010 07:39:17
Originally by: Ratnix Foisen Edited by: Ratnix Foisen on 25/08/2010 16:12:32
Originally by: Freyya it's called ATi Eyefinity and can provide 3 screens on 1 display (1 of which needs to be displayport) or even eyefinity6 for 6 screens on 1 card. Google is your friend
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Your, quirk if i may, was that you needed more than 1 vidcard to hook up more than 2 monitors. I showed you that you can do 6 monitors on 1 card and no, you're not forced to go fullscreen with it. You can make each monitor show a different screen. All the showcases are about gaming performances though because that shows the full potential of eyefinity.
You wanted to use more cards to hook up more than 2 screens; I show you you don't need more cards for more screens. Hence your original statement was corrected. Now you're asking/saying something else than what I responded to but ok; Displayport offers the functionality of daisy-chaining multiple monitors. For this to work however the displays used must support this aswell since you have to hook up display to display. This hasn't been implemented by manufacturers yet afaict.
The other option you have is called display link. Following link shows you examples; Display link This also works through Daisy chaining but with USB or via USB docking ports to which you attach your main videocable. ___________
NOW COLLECTING ISD AND CCP AUTOGRAPHS It'll be worth something someday. -Rauth
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