Our neighborhood is getting fiber installed. I already told them to get my house "fiber ready" as it doesn't cost me anything and will save me $200 if I decide later that I want it. They are offering 1000/1000 for about the same price I pay for 300/10 so I'm considering it. The main fiber box is...
I remember watching a YouTube video a while back where a guy removed his block while the motherboard and everything was still in the case. The backplate fell out and went down behind the motherboard tray. It wasn't necessarily the same AIO that you have but it's plausible that the back plates...
I think techjunky is likely correct. When you mount the pump block and secure it with the thumbscrews it will pull the back plate in tight like a clamshell.
Hmmm. Mine is the same. To be honest I've never checked this before. Everything works fine so I never opened that section. But that section only seems to apply if GPU acceleration is being utilized. Are you using software that can use GPU acceleration?
I had something similar happen a few years ago, also with RAW files (CR2 files from Canon Rebel XT, 30D, 40D and 1DMKII). Ever since that time I no longer move files, I copy them. I was able to use some software to recover most of the files, but not the original file names. I had to manually...
I would be surprised if the batteries were the same physical size given their differences in capacity. That being said the charging of the battery by the UPS should be sufficient, it will just take longer to recharge it after an outage.
You do realize that those are entirely 2 different voltages? Your house is 120/240V AC. The CPU is using ~1V DC.
Power=Volts*Amps
For the house, a 200A service times 240V is 48,000 watts
For the CPU in this case 500A times 1V is 500 watts
I have 2 MSI cards, 1 is an RX6800XT. I bought the MSI because I felt like it looked the best. I wanted a white card but there are so few white AMD gpus. So I had to paint mine. It has performed flawlessly so no complaints here.
I did some of the same research you are doing when we built my son's PC a few years back. His build was going to be the first time I used an AIO. He bought an inexpensive Enermax AIO. After building the system I noted that the pump was slightly audible over the fans in the system and wondered if...
I would get one of the docking station style adapters (SATA to USB). And probably one that holds multiple HDD, like this one. They have a 2 or 4 drive version. SABRENT USB 3.0 to SATA I/II/III Dual Bay External Hard Drive Docking Station for 2.5 or 3.5in HDD, SSD with Hard Drive...
Does your GPU look like it's sagging? I'd be surprised if you need one when vertically mounting a GPU. The same forces do not apply when mounted in this way. The GPU can not pivot around the PCIe slot like is does when mounted horizontally.
Do you have a battery backup? If not, that would be on my short list of things to purchase.
My guess is that the drive is toast. Can you try it in another system or with an adapter? If it doesn't show up that way I'd say it needs to be replaced.
I'm going to disagree with TechJunky on this one. I've used the multiple AP method previously and while it "works" it's just not as seamless for several reasons which I'll get to. I tried multiple APs to keep the cost down since I already had them, or could get them rather cheap. I tried using...
I always build the barebones system outside of the case to ensure that everything at least posts. So motherboard, CPU, RAM, M.2 drives (SATA drives are easier to replace unless it's an ITX system), PSU, and GPU. This way if something isn't working it's easier to troubleshoot and swap/replace...
I understood what you wrote. And I don't deny that one strand making contact would show continuity. My point is that in this case, if the continuity test showed any continuity at all he likely wouldn't be experiencing the issues at hand. So it's highly probable that a continuity test would show...
Stress test it as much as you can. My guess is that one (or more) of the wires in the extensions isn't crimped properly. If you have a multimeter you can test continuity of each pin to verify if you want. Otherwise just try another extension.
For purely gaming you could go with either AMD or Intel on the CPU side. AMD would be the AM5 platform which has had one series of CPUs released so far (Ryzen 7000) and a new series set to be released around this summer (Ryzen 9000). Intel is on the last series of its LGA1700 platform (14000...
Well, you should be able to run Fortnite for longer than that. Do the event logs show anything?
Outside of trying a different BIOS I would think you either have a CPU or a motherboard problem. Without a spare of either it will be difficult to determine though. I honestly would lean toward the...
All of that sounds fine. I believe my daughter's PC is on an F21a, it has been a few months since I updated it. We have EXPO enabled and are using PBO+CO along with some fan curves so just a little more than you have set up.
If you reinstall the CPU take a look at the socket for any bent pins...
My daughter's PC has the same CPU and motherboard. Her CPU/VGA/RAM LEDs turn OFF as soon as Windows starts to boot. The manual says that if the CPU/VGA/RAM LED is on after booting there is something wrong. What BIOS version do you have? Have you made any changes in the BIOS, perhaps try...
I'm a big believer in reusing hardware for other purposes if possible. For years my unRAID server was an AMD Athlon 3000 1.9GHz with 2gb of RAM. I upgraded about 2 years ago to an Intel 2300 with 8GB of RAM from a Dell XPS system that we replaced. So there's no reason your EPYC won't be fine...
What are your temps like during the benchmarks? What frequency are you getting? Use something like HWInfo64 or MSI afterburner to check.
Edit: I see the info in the screenshots. Temps look good.
What PCI slot is your card installed in? GPUz shows it as X1 3.0???
Then monitor the frequency and make sure it is reaching it's rated speeds. Any chance you checked scores on another benchmark and can compare previous scores to today?
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