LarZen Skrevet 10. juli 2011 Del Skrevet 10. juli 2011 Klar til å bestille ny pc nå men er usikker på hovedkortet, her er delene jeg har satt samens. Corsair Obsidian 800D Big Tower Sort Corsair HX 850W PSU MSI Z68A-GD80, Socket-1155 Intel® Core™ i7-2600K Processor Corsair Vengeance™ DDR3 1600MHz 16GB CL9 Gainward GeForce GTX 560Ti 1GB PhysX Corsair SSD Force Series™ 3, 120GB Corsair SSD Force Series™ 3, 120GB Sony Optiarc DVD±RW Burner, AD-7260S Er en såkalt ferdig maskin fra Komplett dette og lurer på om jeg skal kjøre med det som er i lista eller går for dette som er noe rimeligere? Har tenkt å sette i et større skjermkort senere. Lenke til kommentar
Robbansvenske Skrevet 10. juli 2011 Del Skrevet 10. juli 2011 (endret) Se linken: Den har jo fortsatt Z68 hvis det er det du vill ha. http://www.komplett....aspx?sku=63306 Den du ville byte til har vist noen Cool Boot problemere men er vel ikke noe stort problem.. Endret 10. juli 2011 av Robbansvenske Lenke til kommentar
larspli Skrevet 10. juli 2011 Del Skrevet 10. juli 2011 Trenger du virkelig 16 GB DDR3 RAM? Btw liker ASUS HK bedre enn MSI, men det er vel bare smak og behag. Lenke til kommentar
Chavalito Skrevet 10. juli 2011 Del Skrevet 10. juli 2011 Tja, jeg vil kanskje ha valgt MSI hovedkortet, selv om jeg er Asus fanboy. Les hva Overclockersclub sier om det hovedkortet. "Conclusion: So where do I start with the Z68A-GD80? If you start with the performance and overclocking, its P67 Deja Vu all over again. To put that in context, I need to say that it is a good thing. Even a mediocre chip can pull off some stellar numbers when thrown into a well built board. The Z68A-GD80 fits that description to a "T". To that end, the maximum clock speed I was able to pull out of this board with stability was 4966MHz or pretty much equal to the highest clock speed my poor 2600K will run Prime 95 at. I did find I needed a tad more voltage to get it stable than some of the other boards I have used but it's really a moot point at close to 1.5 volts. If manual tweaking is something that is above your means or capabilities, MSI has equipped the Z68A-GD80 with its One Touch OC Genie. I am still amazed at how simple it is to get a nice stable overclock with just the push of a button. That's it. Push the button and watch the clock speed it delivers. In this case, 4.2Ghz was the result. That's 500MHz more than you get with Turbo Boost enabled and all for a minimum time commitment. But wait there's more...MSI's Control Center utility will allow for both overclocking and power saving features from within the Windows environment with a real time application of the adjustments. This can be good or bad depending on how aggressive you are with the adjustments. Making all of this performance possible is the Military Class II components including DrMos, Dynamic Switching Super Ferrite Chokes, Hi-C caps with Tantulum cores and Active phase switching . DrMos allows for higher current flow (2x or 40A) and increased efficiency of up to 96%. The Tantulam core capacitors offer 15% less current leakage while the Dynamic Switching Super Ferrite Chokes offer increases in current capacity and a 10% increase in efficiency. While performance is good, it's not the determining factor in many builds. Reading the forums people are looking for value and features. Features sell. Of course with the Z68A-GD80 there are the Military Class II components but there's more to the board than that. The list includes USB 3.0 connectivity front and rear, Intel Z68 Chipset to take advantage of Intel Quick Sync technology, LucidLogixs Virtu software that allows for a single monitor connection to the system when a discrete video card is used to get the best of both worlds (low power consumption in 2D mode and the power of the discrete GPU in the 3D environment) when you are ready to game. I found that this option worked fine in most of the games I tried but 3DMark Vantage still did not show any improvement while Batman AA showed the performance jump it should have when the software was enabled. Support for both CrossfireX and NVIDIA SLI GPU technologies is included and up to two cards are supported in Virtu. What has to be one of the best additions to a board are the V Check points. These are so far the best implementation of this option allowing the user to leave the multimeter probes in place during a bench session without modifying anything. And last but not least, is the UEFI Click BIOS. For my tastes it does not fit in the grand scheme of the Z68A-GD80. The look just does not fit. However that's where the bad stops and the good begins. Once you work your way through the BIOS a few times, I found it easy to navigate and easy to use with both a mouse and keyboard. The "save overclocking profile" option in the Click BIOS worked great and allowed for an immediate boot up to 4.96GHz from the stock settings. The SSD caching feature of the Z68 chipset showed some promise. I was able to see increased performance in the PCMark Vantage testing as well as the start up and shut down testing. However, to see these benefits you need to use a drive that is at least twice as fast as the mechanical drive you are using. The maximum size cache that can be used is 64GB so a small SSD is a good choice to increase performance without going off the deep end on costs. Z68 is a mainstream chip set you know. When it's all said and done, MSI has put together a good functional package with the Z68A-GD80 that offers up real performance enhancements along with some innovative features to put this board a couple notches above the P67 based boards in its lineup. Pros: Overclocking Performance Good Looks Military Spec components OC Genie USB 3.0 V Check Points Click BIOS Super Charger Cons: Virtu still needs a little work Click BIOS" Lenke til kommentar
Ed Hunter Skrevet 10. juli 2011 Del Skrevet 10. juli 2011 (endret) 16 GB ram er litt overkill imo, og kva for ein cpu-kjøler går du for? Kan bli kollisjon med minnemoduler som har høgprofil heatsinks og store luftkjølere, spesiellt når du skal benytte alle sporene... Endret 10. juli 2011 av Ed Hunter Lenke til kommentar
Chavalito Skrevet 10. juli 2011 Del Skrevet 10. juli 2011 (endret) Tror ikke det vil bli noe problem med stor CPU kjøler, Overclockersclub brukte en Noctua NH-12P og hadde ingen problemer med den. Det minnet han har valgt tror jeg heller ikke vil skape problemer, det er ganske god plass rundt CPU sokkelen. Endret 10. juli 2011 av Chavalito Lenke til kommentar
LarZen Skrevet 12. juli 2011 Forfatter Del Skrevet 12. juli 2011 (endret) 16 GB ram er litt overkill imo, og kva for ein cpu-kjøler går du for? Kan bli kollisjon med minnemoduler som har høgprofil heatsinks og store luftkjølere, spesiellt når du skal benytte alle sporene... Kjører stock til å starte med, men hadde tenkt å kjøpe dette senere http://www.komplett....aspx?sku=635806 Og ja det var kanskje litt overkill med ram...men det skilte så lite i pris syntes jeg så kjørte på... Endret 12. juli 2011 av _LarZen_ Lenke til kommentar
Anbefalte innlegg
Opprett en konto eller logg inn for å kommentere
Du må være et medlem for å kunne skrive en kommentar
Opprett konto
Det er enkelt å melde seg inn for å starte en ny konto!
Start en kontoLogg inn
Har du allerede en konto? Logg inn her.
Logg inn nå