Processor: Intel i5 4570 3.2Ghz
MoBo: Asus H87 Plus
RAM: 8GB
Power Supply: Nox Urano VX 650W
GPU: GeForce GT 640 2GB GDDR5
I'd like an upgrade for playing ultra in WoW (and other games). Some advices?
Thanks a lot
Processor: Intel i5 4570 3.2Ghz
MoBo: Asus H87 Plus
RAM: 8GB
Power Supply: Nox Urano VX 650W
GPU: GeForce GT 640 2GB GDDR5
I'd like an upgrade for playing ultra in WoW (and other games). Some advices?
Thanks a lot
Last edited by mmocd8e9a8aeea; 2016-10-24 at 06:56 PM.
PC: CPU - i7-4790K, MoBo - MSI Z97 gaming 5, Memory - 16G Corsair vengeance LPX DDR3, GPU - EVGA 970 FTW edition, Storage- 1x Sandisk X400 M.2 512GB, 1X WD blue 1TB HDD, 1x WD green 1TB HDD, PSU - EVGA 550W 80+ bronze.
In addition to that, I'd look at replacing the PSU as well. It's a cheap brand known to overrate their transformers and usually have bad primary capacitors. Definitely something I'd think about replacing before doing any OCing. New GPU should be ok as it will probably use less power than the old one, but I'd still probably replace PSU at the same time.
Please dont upgrade your CPU or motherboard, they are more than fine. GPU and PSU upgrades sure.
PC: CPU - i7-4790K, MoBo - MSI Z97 gaming 5, Memory - 16G Corsair vengeance LPX DDR3, GPU - EVGA 970 FTW edition, Storage- 1x Sandisk X400 M.2 512GB, 1X WD blue 1TB HDD, 1x WD green 1TB HDD, PSU - EVGA 550W 80+ bronze.
Dude he has a non-k series CPU, its not OC'able. If he picked OCable parts to start with that is fine, but selling both of those to go to OC parts is just a ridiculous notion.
All he needs is a GPU, and a PSU if he wants peace of mind.
In fact his PSU seems decent quality, all he needs is a GPU:
https://elchapuzasinformatico.com/20...-750-y-tx-850/
Uses channelwell internals, and per that review is a pretty decent PSU.
Last edited by Fascinate; 2016-10-25 at 01:47 AM.
PC: CPU - i7-4790K, MoBo - MSI Z97 gaming 5, Memory - 16G Corsair vengeance LPX DDR3, GPU - EVGA 970 FTW edition, Storage- 1x Sandisk X400 M.2 512GB, 1X WD blue 1TB HDD, 1x WD green 1TB HDD, PSU - EVGA 550W 80+ bronze.
for 4th gen K series i5 CPU's you can get 4.0 out of then easy enough and yes actually in games like wow every little bit is important, using WoW as an example, its very CPU bound so that 15% ish Overclock is worth the price ...... given you have the extra cash to spend. if not it's not worth striping cash away from the GPU budget just to be able to OC.
TL/DR the cost of being able to OC is dependent on your budget, needs, and personal preference.
PC: CPU - i7-4790K, MoBo - MSI Z97 gaming 5, Memory - 16G Corsair vengeance LPX DDR3, GPU - EVGA 970 FTW edition, Storage- 1x Sandisk X400 M.2 512GB, 1X WD blue 1TB HDD, 1x WD green 1TB HDD, PSU - EVGA 550W 80+ bronze.
i5 4570 boosts to 3.6ghz at stock, a 4.1ghz OC is only 500mhz. Not even close to worth it unless he could sell his current motherboard to cover at least half the cost of a z97 board. Of course all of this is just a hypothetical, as he does not have a CPU that can OC lol.
I would either get a 3gb 1060 or wait til tomorrow and get a 1050ti for 140 bucks, would be a massive upgrade for him.
PC: CPU - i7-4790K, MoBo - MSI Z97 gaming 5, Memory - 16G Corsair vengeance LPX DDR3, GPU - EVGA 970 FTW edition, Storage- 1x Sandisk X400 M.2 512GB, 1X WD blue 1TB HDD, 1x WD green 1TB HDD, PSU - EVGA 550W 80+ bronze.
Ok you have no idea what you are talking about, ever since sandy everything has been overclocked by adjusting the turbo ratio (if you are doing fixed ratios+volts you are doing it WRONG).
you are very confused. you overclock by disabling the turbo then adjusting the core multiplier and testing, repeat until its unstable at stock voltage then up the voltage a small amount and test, repeat till you reach a max, safe, stable overclock. Now I could educate all day but this is not the thread for that, this is to discuss his upgrades.
PC: CPU - i7-4790K, MoBo - MSI Z97 gaming 5, Memory - 16G Corsair vengeance LPX DDR3, GPU - EVGA 970 FTW edition, Storage- 1x Sandisk X400 M.2 512GB, 1X WD blue 1TB HDD, 1x WD green 1TB HDD, PSU - EVGA 550W 80+ bronze.
I don't know where you got the idea you change turbo boost to overclock but its wrong. the only reason to try something like that is if you do not want the CPU running at the fixed speed all the time, Which if you have a proper CPU cooler having it run at a fixed OC is not an issue.
PC: CPU - i7-4790K, MoBo - MSI Z97 gaming 5, Memory - 16G Corsair vengeance LPX DDR3, GPU - EVGA 970 FTW edition, Storage- 1x Sandisk X400 M.2 512GB, 1X WD blue 1TB HDD, 1x WD green 1TB HDD, PSU - EVGA 550W 80+ bronze.
Please do a little research before posting, this has been the norm since sandy. What you describe was only common before turbo was introduced. I think you are confused on what turbo actually means, its not a seperate setting or something it is integral to how the CPU clocks up and down. All you have to do from sandy on up is adjust the turbo ratio and volts, and most times you dont even have to touch volts as the motherboard will increase that as you turn the turbo multiplier up.
Again what you are describing is the old old way of doing things, no one overclocks like that anymore. If we are talking about socket 1156 and 1366 you would be correct, but those are nearly 10 year old platforms.
" Turbo tuning " is =/= overclocking. as for your claim that no one core multiplier overclocks ... you might want to do some research because that IS how you overclock, but don't want to listen to me? fine listen to Linus.
PC: CPU - i7-4790K, MoBo - MSI Z97 gaming 5, Memory - 16G Corsair vengeance LPX DDR3, GPU - EVGA 970 FTW edition, Storage- 1x Sandisk X400 M.2 512GB, 1X WD blue 1TB HDD, 1x WD green 1TB HDD, PSU - EVGA 550W 80+ bronze.
That's where your confusion comes in, turbo overclocking IS multiplier overclocking. You thought turbo was something different.
Uh-huh, because a OCable CPU with a Motherboard that can not OC is more than fine. He should most definitely get a Motherboard that and OC his CPU. After a GPU and PSU of course.
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well, he edited out the k, however, if you look at the first response, it was quoted where he DID have a k, so you can see the confusion.
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No, turbo is something else. Multiplier OC and Turbo OC are not the same thing at all. Turbo is what is on by default. Take my 4690k for example. It has a stock speed of 3.5 and a Max Turbo Frequency of 3.9. So if all I used was Turbo, then my Max OC would be 3.9. This is intels own terminology:
http://ark.intel.com/products/80811/...up-to-3_90-GHz
So if it has a Max Turbo Frequency of 3.9 and I used a multiplier to OC it to 4.4, that can not be considered the same thing as Turbo, as the Max Turbo Frequency is 3.9 and I am well beyond that. I am pretty sure it is you that has what turbo is confused, because you think it is the same thing as multiplier OCing and it's not.
GPU and PSU as others have said... CPU/Motherboard will do nothing but waste money.