sydthebeat wrote: » Sweet divine that's some graphics card!! Do you really need a split ssd AND a 4tb sata drive??
[Deleted User] wrote: » The smaller of the two ssd's goes directly into the mainboard for the OS The larger of the two is a game storage drive. The 4TB is a media drive. I've a large movie collection! Yes the GPU is a monster.
Deleted User wrote: » Took a bit of extra time to research my PC build. Here she is for anyone interested: https://ie.pcpartpicker.com/list/CMPJn7
Squidgy Black wrote: » Would you not go for a hybrid drive like the FireCuda for game storage? The 860 is serious overkill for the price of it.
awec wrote: » Cheese and sauasage. Fcuk off you freak.
molloyjh wrote: » I cant think of pizza without mourning the loss of Beast in Greystones. Best pizza I've ever had outside of Naples. Closed down just before we moved to Greystones. The Wicklow Way was amazing.
[Deleted User] wrote: » Nah I want a pure ssd for gaming. I was going to put my op sys on that drive but decided to get something plugged straight into the mainboard instead. It's going to take me a good while to build and setup. Been a while!
[Deleted User] wrote: » Jaysus thag gfx card is more expensive than my whole rig!
troyzer wrote: » Got my learner permit recently and I'm flying around on my motorbike. To anyone who has ever had anxiety or panic disorder, get a bike. The mindfulness and sense of peace you get is unbelievable.
Deleted User wrote: » I've never gotten a top of the line gpu and it's actually a decent price for that card. It's 300 more on the gpu than I'd predicted but I think it's worth it considering savings I've made elsewhere. Got some good advice on the setup and this is where they said to go properly premium. I'm looking forward to putting this together, then spending several days losing my mind with Microsoft software and finally, hopefully having a high performance rig for the new year!
Deleted User wrote: » I would have thought the opposite to be true! But I've very little experience on motor bikes. How much is it costing you?
shootermacg wrote: » Cheaping out on everything except the graphics card? That's like putting a spoiler on a Lada. The processor and RAM will be your bottle neck and will require an upgrade sooner rather than later. If I were you, I'd be looking for 3600 CPU, good overclockable 3200 RAM and a good low end x570 board. You could buy yourself a 1080ti second hand for about 400/500, leaving you with a spare 400/500 to spend on future proofing the most important parts of your system. You'll notice a higher frame rate in games and, better processing in general because of the reduced latency on the newer chips paired with the old ones. 16GB of 3200 RAM would be a better purchase than 32 GB of 3000 RAM. More importantly you can just pop in a new edition AMD chip whenever you like and you've just upgraded your system.
Interested Observer wrote: » I also would not go with that single fan CPU water cooler, they don't perform that well. You can get a Noctua air cooler for around the same price or less.
Deleted User wrote: » I plan on doing a CPU upgrade this time next year, but that CPU is an absolute steal considering it's performance. Will have a look at the ram - thanks for the heads up. Airflow is a problem for where my PC is enclosed - hence water cooling.
shootermacg wrote: » It may be a steal for performance, but ultimately a waste of money. So when you buy your new cpu, add an additional 200 euro onto it and that's how much it cost you taking the old cpu into account. Single fan coolers not a great idea either. Uou could just get a 3600/3700 with stock cooling instead. Would be almost the same price. Isn't there anything you can salvage from your old system? 2K is a lot of cash to spend on a 3 year old system. My advice is to get the best bare-bones you can afford. Leave the peripherals (hard drives) until they're on sale (except the M2 drive for the OS). Use any hard drives you already have instead of ponying up for them right now, which is limiting the cash you could be spending on the main components, board, RAM, CPU. The advantages of doing this now is, you'll generally get more M2 or NVME slots on a new board, mine has 3. You get a more up to date version of PCIExpress (faster IO). And more importantly, you'll be saving yourself the hassle of having to buy and build a new system for an additional 4/5 years at least. I've also heard people complaining about boost speed and overheating with the old MSI boards and the new CPUs, so that's a possible issue you'll be dodging. Anyways, ultimately it's your decision..
[Deleted User] wrote: » There is a good reason I'm getting this now, I mostly use my home pc for work so...............
mfceiling wrote: » What the hell do you do for a living Venjur? Bond villain?
Deleted User wrote: » Are you that girl on twitch that plays that dancing game in skimpy shorts?
[Deleted User] wrote: » I do something that DEFINITELY requires that standard of WORK computer.
Neil3030 wrote: » with the gpu I'm guessing crypto mining is part of it?
sydthebeat wrote: » say what now ????
awec wrote: » I see Ian Bailey has been arrested and will be extradited to France. Not sure how I feel about that. Sets a bit of a worrying precedent surely?