Questions On Power Supply And Dual Graphics Cards
#1
Posted 20 April 2012 - 10:01 PM
ASUS P8Z68-V/GEN3 Intel Z68 Motherboard
Intel Core i7-2600K
Corsair Hydro H100 CPU Liquid Cooler
Corsair Vengeance DDR3 1600MHz 16GB (4 x 4GB)
EVGA GeForce GTX 580 SuperClocked (1536MB GDDR5)
Creative Labs Sound Blaster X-Fi XtremeGamer
Seagate Barracuda 1TB (7200rpm, 64MB cache)
Patriot Pyro SE Solid State Drive 120GB
Lite-On Internal Blu-Ray Burner
Cooler Master HAF 932 Full Tower
OCZ ZX Series Modular Power Supply 850W
I have a SAPPHIRE HD 6850 1GB GDDR5 PCIE in my current PC setup. I wanted to maybe switch out the GeForce graphics card above, buy another 6850 Radeon and use dual cards in the new system.
My question is: Is this even a good idea? And if it is, would I need to buy a different Power Supply than the one listed above? If so what would be a good choice?
Thanks in advance.
#2
Posted 20 April 2012 - 11:03 PM
aloot, on 20 April 2012 - 10:01 PM, said:
ASUS P8Z68-V/GEN3 Intel Z68 Motherboard
Intel Core i7-2600K
Corsair Hydro H100 CPU Liquid Cooler
Corsair Vengeance DDR3 1600MHz 16GB (4 x 4GB)
EVGA GeForce GTX 580 SuperClocked (1536MB GDDR5)
Creative Labs Sound Blaster X-Fi XtremeGamer
Seagate Barracuda 1TB (7200rpm, 64MB cache)
Patriot Pyro SE Solid State Drive 120GB
Lite-On Internal Blu-Ray Burner
Cooler Master HAF 932 Full Tower
OCZ ZX Series Modular Power Supply 850W
I have a SAPPHIRE HD 6850 1GB GDDR5 PCIE in my current PC setup. I wanted to maybe switch out the GeForce graphics card above, buy another 6850 Radeon and use dual cards in the new system.
My question is: Is this even a good idea? And if it is, would I need to buy a different Power Supply than the one listed above? If so what would be a good choice?
Thanks in advance.
first, if you honestly think you need 16GB of ram, do it as a 2x8GB kit, as it will be better for the memory controller. Though, unless you are running a half dozen VM's at once, there really is no need.
Second, your choice of video cards will work out well either way. Though X-fire does introduce other problems that require patience, and tweaking. The power supply is overkill for both configurations. You could run 3 of either card with that.
This post has been edited by waldojim: 20 April 2012 - 11:04 PM
#3
Posted 21 April 2012 - 09:33 AM
Need a Windows ISO image?
#4
Posted 22 April 2012 - 09:51 AM
aloot, on 20 April 2012 - 10:01 PM, said:
ASUS P8Z68-V/GEN3 Intel Z68 Motherboard
Intel Core i7-2600K
Corsair Hydro H100 CPU Liquid Cooler
Corsair Vengeance DDR3 1600MHz 16GB (4 x 4GB)
EVGA GeForce GTX 580 SuperClocked (1536MB GDDR5)
Creative Labs Sound Blaster X-Fi XtremeGamer
Seagate Barracuda 1TB (7200rpm, 64MB cache)
Patriot Pyro SE Solid State Drive 120GB
Lite-On Internal Blu-Ray Burner
Cooler Master HAF 932 Full Tower
OCZ ZX Series Modular Power Supply 850W
I have a SAPPHIRE HD 6850 1GB GDDR5 PCIE in my current PC setup. I wanted to maybe switch out the GeForce graphics card above, buy another 6850 Radeon and use dual cards in the new system.
My question is: Is this even a good idea? And if it is, would I need to buy a different Power Supply than the one listed above? If so what would be a good choice?
Thanks in advance.
I agree that 16 Gb is a bit much on the ram. I am using 8 Gb in here and it is fine. If you want to go with that PSU, then do so. It won't hurt anything. I am using a Corsair AX850 in here with an Nvidia GTX 560Ti. Is It more than you need? Yep. but if you decide to go with the card in sli sometime down the road, you won't have to worry about the overhead as you will have plenty. The build looks good though.
http://novabench.com/image/266589.png
______________________________________________________________
Gateway FX6800-01e----Intel Core i7 960 ( 3.2 GHz)---- Seagate Barracuda 750 Gb SATA II / 3.0 Hdd---- 6 Gb Crucial 1066 Mhz memory, running in Tri Channel conf-----Corsair TX650w PSU----- EVGA Nvidia GTX 560Ti 1gb GDDR5 Vram ----DVD +/- RW / CD ,RAM/DL Optical drive w/ Label Flash-----Gateway TBGM-01 Motherboard.... Vista Home Premium 64 bit OS w/ SP2; Samsung Synch Master 2243BWX 22" Monitor.
#5
Posted 22 April 2012 - 11:32 AM
Need a Windows ISO image?
#6
Posted 22 April 2012 - 01:04 PM
#7
Posted 25 April 2012 - 06:24 AM
I would never recommend dual cards, unless you're desperate for performance and don't want to switch to a newer, faster card. Dual cards consume more power and generate more heat in the system. I've also read that the 6850 in crossfire suffers from Microstuttering.
So I would maybe sell the 6850 and keep the GTX 580 or get a HD 6970 instead.
Performance wise, the 6850 CF still edges over (only by 5-9 FPS) the other two, but it's not worth the shortcomings of CF.
As for the PSU, please avoid an OCZ unit. Seasonic, Corsair (HX/TX series) and XFX are top brands to choose from.
This post has been edited by ReviverSoft: 25 April 2012 - 06:26 AM
#8
Posted 25 April 2012 - 09:35 PM
ReviverSoft, on 25 April 2012 - 06:24 AM, said:
I would never recommend dual cards, unless you're desperate for performance and don't want to switch to a newer, faster card. Dual cards consume more power and generate more heat in the system. I've also read that the 6850 in crossfire suffers from Microstuttering.
So I would maybe sell the 6850 and keep the GTX 580 or get a HD 6970 instead.
Performance wise, the 6850 CF still edges over (only by 5-9 FPS) the other two, but it's not worth the shortcomings of CF.
As for the PSU, please avoid an OCZ unit. Seasonic, Corsair (HX/TX series) and XFX are top brands to choose from.
All of them do(meaning all multi-card setups). The full extent of the microstuttering differs from one set of cards to the next, what game you are using, what frame balancing methods are in use, etc. From what I have seen, the only way to truly stop most microstuttering out - is use 3 cards from ATI. That seems to result in the least microstuttering overall.
OCZ power supplies are actually fairly decent. Example from a trusted source: The very OCZ ZX 850 in question. Earning not only a Hardware Secrets Golden award, but being recommended side-by-side with the Seasonic X850.
Now, I would I buy this powersupply myself? Nope. I have no need for 850 watts, and I want a slightly different product from Antec (the HCP line). This doesn't change the fact that you are recommending someone ditch a perfectly usable power supply based on your gut feeling, not the facts.
This post has been edited by waldojim: 25 April 2012 - 09:35 PM
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