Upgrades, upgrades, upgrades (ongoing)...Stay tuned for more...
- Case: Xigmatek Elysium All Black ATX super tower case CCC-HSA0DS-U01 → NewEgg = $219.99 + $28.99 S/H = $248.98
- PSUs:
- Thermaltake TR2 RX-850 AP 850 W modular PSU W0319RU → NewEgg = $104.99 (after $25 mail rebate) (free S/H)
- VisionTek Juice Box 450 W dedicated graphics card 5.25 inch bay main PSU synchronized SLI/CrossFire ready 900222 → BestBuy = $69.99 (local store past sale)
- CPU: Intel Core i7-3960X 3.3 GHz unlocked 6 cores Hyperthreading 15 MB L3 cache LGA2011 CPU BX80619i73960X → Amazon 3rd party vendor = $949.99 + $4.99 S/H = $954.98
- Cooler: Corsair Hydro Series H80 high performance liquid CPU Cooler CWCH80 → NewEgg = $83.99 (after $10 mail rebate) (free S/H)
- Thermal Compound: Arctic Cooling MX-4 all-around thermal compound paste 4 g AC-MX4 → Amazon = $6.00 + $3.98 S/H = $9.98
- Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-X79-UD3 LGA2011 ATX Intel X79 DDR3 PCIx 3.0 x16 SATA3 USB 3.0 dual UEFI BIOS motherboard → SuperBiiz = $249.99 (free S/H)
- RAM: Corsair Vengeance 16 GB (4x4) DDR3 1866 (PC3 15000) quad channel XMP ready DRAM CMZ16GX3M4X1866C9R → NewEgg = $159.99 (free S/H)
- Video: eVGA NVidia GeForce GTX 580 3 GB 768-bit GDDR5 PCIx x16 SLI ready video controller 03G-P3-1584-AR → Amazon = $549.99 (free S/H)
eVGA NVidia GeForce GTX 590 (580 x 2) Classified 3 GB 768-bit GDDR5 PCIx x16 SLI ready video controller 03G-P3-1596-AR → Amazing Cellulars = $726.60 + $27.65 S/H = $754.25 [out of stock!]- Audio: Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi Titanium Fatal1ty Pro 7.1 PCIx sound card SB0886 → Amazon = $103.17 (free S/H) (past sale)
- HDD/SSD Controllers + HDDs/SSDs:
- Internal HDD/SSD Controllers:
- SATA + PATA: Rosewill RC-216 (JMicron) eSATA2 UltraDMA/ATA133 dual channel RAID 0/1/0+1/JBOD PCIx drive controller → NewEgg = $19.99 + $2.99 S/H = $22.98
- PATA: HighPoint RocketRAID 133 UltraDMA/ATA133 dual channel RAID 0/1/0+1/JBOD PCI drive controller → Amazon = $45 (free S/H) (past sale)
- External HDD/SSD Dock: StarTech External Hard Drive dual dock eSATA2 USB 2.0 → Amazon = $44.84 (free S/H) (past sale)
- Internal HDDs/SSDs:
- SSD: OCZ SSD Solid 3 60 GB SATA3 MLC solid state drive → NewEgg = gift (free
)
- SATA: Western Digital VelociRaptor 150 GB 10000 rpm 16 MB buffer SATA2 hard disk drive → BestBuy = $84 (local store past sale)
- PATA x 2: Seagate Barracuda 7200 rpm 250 GB 16 MB buffer UltraDMA/ATA133 hard disk drive → NewEgg = gift (free
)
- External HDDs/SSDs:
- SATA x 4: Western Digital Caviar Green 2 TB 64 MB buffer SATA2 hard disk drive → NewEgg = $74.99 (free S/H) each (past sale)
- SATA x 2: Seagate Barracuda 7200 rpm 2 TB 32 MB buffer SATA2 hard disk drive → NewEgg = $139.99 (free S/H) each (past sale)
- SATA x 2: Western Digital Caviar Green 1 TB 64 MB buffer SATA2 hard disk drive → NewEgg = $54.99 (free S/H) each (past sale)
- SATA x 2: Western Digital Caviar 7200 rpm 250 GB 16 MB buffer SATA2 hard disk drive → NewEgg = gift (free
)
- Optical Drives:
- SATA Blu-ray: Sony Optiarc Black 12x BD-R 2x BD-RE 16x DVD-R 8x DVD-RW 8 MB cache 250 ms SATA BD-5300S → NewEgg = $84.99 + $4.99 S/H = $89.98
- SATA DVD: Samsung Black + LightScribe 20x DVD-R 8x DVD-RW 16x DVD-RDL 6x DVD-RW 48x CD-R 32x CD-RW 2 MB cache 130 ms SATA SH-S203N → NewEgg = $23.99 (free S/H) (past sale)
- PATA DVD: Sony 20x DVD-R 8x DVD-RW 12x DVD-RDL 6x DVD-RW 48x CD-R 32x CD-RW 2 MB cache 130 ms PATA DRU-840A → Amazon = gift (free
)
- Modem: Motorola SB6121 SURFboard Cable Modem DOCSIS 3.0 channel bonding → Amazon = $82.99 (free S/H) (past sale)
- Router: Linksys Wireless-N Gigabit router 4 port 10/100/1000 Gigabit Ethernet 128-bit wireless encryption SPI firewall WRT310N → BestBuy = $44.99 (local store past sale)
- Keyboard: Logitech Illuminated Ultrathin Keyboard with backlighting (white) USB 920-000914 → Amazon = $54.99 (free S/H) (past sale)
- Mouse: Logitech G9x Laser Mouse programmable onboard memory 5700 dpi 12 megapixels/sec 165 inch/sec precision grips USB 910-001152 → Amazon = $54.99 (free S/H) (past sale)
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My tip is to use a thermal compound such as ThreadEasy or its equal, commonly used in the transfer of heat generated by disk brake assemblies, which will transfer heat from your CPU to its heat sink with greater effiency and as a side benefit, it will not dry out in the same manner that the Radio Shack compound does."
I guess people should use something before they comment on it."
I have found that regardless of the maker of heatsink compound it will all "dry out" if subjected to *enough* heat. TO-220 devices (a common case style) are very prone to this, aggravated by running the device/heatsink at elevated temperatures. The hotter the device the faster the grease will bake out. But this is not something to worry about, as the grease is only there to allow the compound to be spread on the device and heatsink junction. The white stuff is Zinc Oxide (ZnO) and the effectiveness does not seam to decrease with the grease gone. On several occasions I cleaned and reapplied new compound after changing one device on a heatsink and found that the new compound did not improve cooling. Unless the junction is disturbed, drying out does not look to be a major problem. It might be an indication that more air flow is needed to keep the CPU/heatsink cooler. There are other heatsink compounds that are much better at moving heat: see this Overclockers.com page. These guys are serious about cooling! Unless one is overclocking or using an early Cyrix CPU, exotic cooling should not be an issue. After all, most of us are not going to keep a CPU for (more than) 5 or 10 years. I like to move lots of air through my PC case. I worry more about heat effecting hard drive life then CPU life. Most cases do not move nearly enough air across the HD/CD/DVD area. And modern video boards can also benefit from better air flow. I found that by gutting a fan, removing the blade, armature and support arms, and using this to space a fan away from the small inlet vent holes, will reduce fan noise (in my case checked with a Radio Shack Sound Meter) by about 9 dB. That is a big improvement in overall noise level. I am using a large (4.5") fan that was just too noisy for comfort. I sacrificed a dead fan for the project. Smaller fans will experience a similar level of improvement." |