Only suggestion is during your performance/gaming tests is to include a large overlay to the bottom left so the FPS, Min/Max, temps for GPU/CPU are visible for your style.
Should've gone with a Z motherboard. No overclocking support also means no underclocking or undervolting support. The mobo you have is likely goosing the voltage.
I got a 3090 in mine and it gets LOUD. I love the case, but like, is that the norm for it? I get TLOU going on it and BRRRRRRRRRRMMMMMMMMM. Any way to quiet it down?
@TechRoundUp the impossible has happened and I got it to shut tf up (reasonably). I put the case fans back in and adjusted the fan curve on the gpu. Will swap out the prepackaged fans for some slim ones.
@@rarthusdraken5654i read that a person decreased max fan speed for the 2 big 140mm at 1000tpm. That reducef the noise and air turbolenze to the gpu..let me know if it is ok. I am receiving this case tomorrow 😊
Yeah, 95 degrees Celsius is definitely no issue, as long as you're good with degrading all of your components exponentially faster. You would have to be an idiot to be okay with those temps when there are dozens of similar sized cases that average an actually normal temp of 60-70.
This is completely refutable. Thermal throttling is a built in fail safe to protect your components from lasting damage, rather than being the result of some physical process driven by heat causing the CPU to run slower...what you thought electrons in your silicone move slower when hot or something? really these are solid state components, what did you THINK caused throttling? Really you should refrain from making statements about something you clearly don't understand. Running your CPU at 90 isn't going to damage anything.
Only suggestion is during your performance/gaming tests is to include a large overlay to the bottom left so the FPS, Min/Max, temps for GPU/CPU are visible for your style.
Very nice build
Should've gone with a Z motherboard. No overclocking support also means no underclocking or undervolting support. The mobo you have is likely goosing the voltage.
Did you not want to use the NH-L12S instead of that cooler?
Hi, what is monitor model?
My cat would push that over and that would be the end
Can it take a regular size PSU?
Only sfx
@@TechRoundUp thanks for answering
I got a 3090 in mine and it gets LOUD. I love the case, but like, is that the norm for it? I get TLOU going on it and BRRRRRRRRRRMMMMMMMMM.
Any way to quiet it down?
Can always play with the fan curve, or slightly undervolt the card
@TechRoundUp the impossible has happened and I got it to shut tf up (reasonably). I put the case fans back in and adjusted the fan curve on the gpu. Will swap out the prepackaged fans for some slim ones.
@@rarthusdraken5654i read that a person decreased max fan speed for the 2 big 140mm at 1000tpm. That reducef the noise and air turbolenze to the gpu..let me know if it is ok. I am receiving this case tomorrow 😊
What's the most powerful pre build pc i could buy?
Now build with amd a cooler brand for cpus
whats the point of comparing with xbos when is bigger than that.. and saying smtg that is self comforting
Ryzen would have been better temps with similar performance
Yeah, 95 degrees Celsius is definitely no issue, as long as you're good with degrading all of your components exponentially faster. You would have to be an idiot to be okay with those temps when there are dozens of similar sized cases that average an actually normal temp of 60-70.
This is completely refutable. Thermal throttling is a built in fail safe to protect your components from lasting damage, rather than being the result of some physical process driven by heat causing the CPU to run slower...what you thought electrons in your silicone move slower when hot or something? really these are solid state components, what did you THINK caused throttling? Really you should refrain from making statements about something you clearly don't understand. Running your CPU at 90 isn't going to damage anything.
It's definitely not optimal, but yeah it ain't hurting anything. @@baglad
You installed the motherboard upside down because the case assembly was incorrect.