Krappadizzle
Member
Electrostatic discharge so you don't fry your components.
I remember frying a Navy weapons system in a "C" school not wearing a strap. They called me Sparky for the rest of the class. I was okay with that.
Electrostatic discharge so you don't fry your components.
i often want to get seriously into PC gaming and then i see threads like this. yeeeowch
i often want to get seriously into PC gaming and then i see threads like this. yeeeowch
i often want to get seriously into PC gaming and then i see threads like this. yeeeowch
your CPU fan is NO LONGER ATTACHED CORRECTLY.
Unlikely. Motherboards often give this popup and block startup when 0 RPM is detected on the CPU fan connector.
I agree that this is still relatively tame and expected on the internet, but nevertheless it is still negative and off-putting.
OP needs help with a problem with his PC, so I assume he isn't in a great mood as it is. Drive-by posts saying his PC was too expensive (which is possibly not even true at all) are at the very least done in bad taste.
Get a 212 Evo heatsink/Fan. $30 and it'll keep that CPU cool
Literal ten seconds for diagnostics and 15 minutes for a fix is too much of a price for the myriad of benefits PC gaming offers?
Also, any console would be out of warranty by that time, so you'd be paying for a fix, instead of having a blast doing it yourself.![]()
Guys, the OP said he built this PC 2 years ago.
Literal ten seconds for diagnostics and 15 minutes for a fix is too much of a price for the myriad of benefits PC gaming offers?
i wasn't trying to start a console vs. pc argument, just making an observation. for the layman this shit seems pretty complicated. we got people talking about tiny fans breaking (how do you fix a tiny fan?), measuring temperatures with some gadgets, isopropyl alcohol and the proper application of various substances.. sounds like mad scientist shit to me.
i guess if i ever do decide to make the leap i'll be buying a pre-made thing..
Aureon said:at 67c idle, it's not even about thermal paste. Vibrations took off one of your cooler's pins - just push back the pins in and you'll likely be fine.
i wasn't trying to start a console vs. pc argument, just making an observation. for the layman this shit seems pretty complicated. we got people talking about tiny fans breaking (how do you fix a tiny fan?), measuring temperatures with some gadgets, isopropyl alcohol and the proper application of various substances.. sounds like mad scientist shit to me.
i guess if i ever do decide to make the leap i'll be buying a pre-made thing..
i wasn't trying to start a console vs. pc argument, just making an observation. for the layman this shit seems pretty complicated. we got people talking about tiny fans breaking (how do you fix a tiny fan?), measuring temperatures with some gadgets, isopropyl alcohol and the proper application of various substances.. sounds like mad scientist shit to me.
i guess if i ever do decide to make the leap i'll be buying a pre-made thing..
i wasn't trying to start a console vs. pc argument, just making an observation. for the layman this shit seems pretty complicated. we got people talking about tiny fans breaking (how do you fix a tiny fan?), measuring temperatures with some gadgets, isopropyl alcohol and the proper application of various substances.. sounds like mad scientist shit to me.
i guess if i ever do decide to make the leap i'll be buying a pre-made thing..
The fans aren't tiny, they are usually around 12 cm in diameter these days. And you don't fix them, you just replace them with a new one (usually around 10 for a good one).i wasn't trying to start a console vs. pc argument, just making an observation. for the layman this shit seems pretty complicated. we got people talking about tiny fans breaking (how do you fix a tiny fan?)
i wasn't trying to start a console vs. pc argument, just making an observation. for the layman this shit seems pretty complicated. we got people talking about tiny fans breaking (how do you fix a tiny fan?), measuring temperatures with some gadgets, isopropyl alcohol and the proper application of various substances.. sounds like mad scientist shit to me.
i guess if i ever do decide to make the leap i'll be buying a pre-made thing..
i wasn't trying to start a console vs. pc argument, just making an observation. for the layman this shit seems pretty complicated. we got people talking about tiny fans breaking (how do you fix a tiny fan?), measuring temperatures with some gadgets, isopropyl alcohol and the proper application of various substances.. sounds like mad scientist shit to me.
i guess if i ever do decide to make the leap i'll be buying a pre-made thing..
Computer fans are not tiny. I'm not sure how you got that idea.
My point is, most of these things really only sound hard as long as you aren't familiar with them.
i was just pointing out that as a person on the outside looking in, this whole situation looks like a disaster. if i spent 2 grand on something and it didn't work (even if its eventually fixable after some research and time spent tinkering) i'd be furious.
that's a tiny fan bro.
well let me tell you how i got that idea. i think of your average fan as being about 1.5 to 2 feet in diameter. my assumption was that such a thing wouldn't fit into a computer case. my assumption was that a fan that's cooling a processor or whatever (??) would be much smaller, say maybe a few inches in diameter. that's a tiny fan bro. but that's not the point.
i was just pointing out that as a person on the outside looking in, this whole situation looks like a disaster. if i spent 2 grand on something and it didn't work (even if its eventually fixable after some research and time spent tinkering) i'd be furious.
i feel like i'm derailing here so i'll stop. carry on
I'll give you some advice that will save you a ton of headaches in your life: Never buy a car or a house.
The fans aren't tiny, they are usually around 12 cm in diameter these days
Or don't do it. Get a friend who knows what he is doing, to do it for you and show you how it's done. It's not hard and you can probably watch some youtube videos. But i would still rather recommend someone with some experience anyway.First thing I'm going to try is reapplying thermal paste (pray I don't screw that up somehow...)
My point is, most of these things really only sound hard as long as you aren't familiar with them.
Love the people shitting on the price of the PC instead of helping. Stay classy.
We all started somewhere. I think a lot of peeps get used to the GPU/CPU upgrade cycle and seem to forget that the initial spend for a decent system, especially if display/input/audio are part of the build, can be pretty high. I was reminded of this recently with the jump to Skylake and a new GPU.I am actually legitimately impressed how overwhelmingly helpful people have been in this thread, not just with the advice that they give but their promptness in responding and the generally friendly attitude they have with their posts.
First thing I'm going to try is reapplying thermal paste (pray I don't screw that up somehow...) and most likely upgrade my PSU. IF that works, I may even go for a GPU upgrade.
What is going on here. Lol.
You're nuts if you think 2k was an ok price 2 years ago. My nephew bought a comp for 1200 or so and got a shitty 960 last year when i could've built him one with at least a 970. He wanted the glowing keyboard crap from ibuypower.
at 67c idle, it's not even about thermal paste. Vibrations took off one of your cooler's pins - just push back the pins in and you'll likely be fine.
Actually, what are good CPU temps? I never really asked.
According to Afterburner mine seems to be around 33 idle and 70 under load (probably while playing Fallout 4). Stock speed, standard snap-on cooler with no thermal paste. If it matters it's all inside a full tower.
Actually, what are good CPU temps? I never really asked.
According to Afterburner mine seems to be around 33 idle and 70 under load (probably while playing Fallout 4). Stock speed, standard snap-on cooler with no thermal paste. If it matters it's all inside a full tower.
As for the cost of OP's computer, I'd like to see a breakdown of that, because I spent maybe 1k on a PC with the same graphics card two and a half years ago.
Good luck. Thermal paste tripped me up on my first couple of builds. I was too scared that I'd put on too much or too little and ended up doing the latter twice.
Watch some youtube video of people doing it. People have different techniques, but it should help give you an idea of what you're looking for in terms of amount regardless of how you apply it.
AMD CPUs do tend to run a bit hot. You don't need water cooling or anything, but depending on airflow in your case you might want to spend $25 on an after market fan. Hopefully you won't need to and a thermal paste reapplication will do the trick.
Those accessories have nothing to do with the problem so perhaps they did not need to be included in the reported price of the system.It is in incredibly poor taste. Guy is asking for help and everyone is criticising his component choices. I would assume via initial 2k included all the accessories like mouse, keyboard and a nice monitor.
... I would assume via initial 2k included all the accessories like mouse, keyboard and a nice monitor.
For $2000 I'm hoping he's in Australia. (glad you got some good help, OP)OP are you anywhere near metro Boston? I have spare case fans and heat paste and can help you install/reinstall the CPU cooler.
Actually, what are good CPU temps? I never really asked.
According to Afterburner mine seems to be around 33 idle and 70 under load (probably while playing Fallout 4). Stock speed, standard snap-on cooler with no thermal paste. If it matters it's all inside a full tower.
As for the cost of OP's computer, I'd like to see a breakdown of that, because I spent maybe 1k on a PC with the same graphics card two and a half years ago.
Do people often include the cost of a TV in the purchase price of a new console? I've never known anyone personally that does that... Now, controllers for the new console, I could understand.
But to me, it just seems disingenuous to inflate the price of a computer with the cost of a monitor.