Taters91, are the speakers just typical speakers or studio monitors? I can't really tell, could be either.
Wow, looks gorgeous, Drunken.
Can we get more overall pics though? -.- Especially dat rear I/O... holy cow. Also specs list, you durp!
Don't mind the cat he's just an attention hogger. Also, NO my computer isn't on the carpet, I have something underneath. I'm not that silly.
One rad is out and the res/pump is out of the build atm since that used to rest on said rad. Combined with some missing cables (24pin in particular), as well as not being arsed to spend more time on pictures, this is what you're getting until I'm back from school in... 9 hours time. (Including sleep.)
I did try to get a better shot of the rear IO, but couldn't find anything satisfying that captured it at the right aperture, sorry.
Specs are the same as last time, but sure.
CPU: i5 2500k
Mobo: Sabertooth Z77
RAM: Dominator Platinum (2x8GB, 1600MHz)
GPU: GTX 680 x2
Sound: Xonar STX
SSD: Force 3 240GB
HDD: Spinpoint F3 1TB
PSU: AX 850
Case: Switch 810
Ideally, I'd prefer not to screw up the aesthetics with a wireless card internally, as they're universally gory green PCBs, and so when I saw that a store in the area sold a wifi range extender that also functioned as switch I grabbed it. Netgear... something something. Hopefully it'll be decent enough to keep up my internet.
Fore mention: Yes, only one screen; No, no sound card integrated is fine for me, I don't use my speakers often; This took forever to write.
- [Chassis/Case]: Corsair Obsidian Series 800D
- [Power Supply]: 800W Corsair GS Power Supply Unit (Dual SLI Compatible)
- [Motherboard]: ASUS Sabertooth Z77 (Intel Z77 Chipset) (ATX Form Factor, 4 DIMMS, 4 PCI Expansion Slots) (USB 3.0 + SATA 6GB/s) + TUF Thermal Armor/Radar
- [Processor]: Intel® Core i5-3570K (3.40-3.80GHz) (22nm, 6MB cache) (Quad-Core CPU) (Z77 Motherboard Required)
- [Overclock]: CPU 4.0GHz to 4.4GHz
- [Graphics Card]: NVIDIA® GeForce GTX 680 (2GB) (Includes PhysX) (EVGA Edition)
- [Hard Drive]: 1,000GB (1TB) 7200RPM Seagate (32MB Cache)
- [Optical Drive]: 24x DVD Writer/Reader + 48x CD Writer/Reader
- [Cooling]: Corsair H80 Liquid CPU Cooler (High-Performance Edition)
- [More cooling]: High performence LED fans (Top of chassie)
- [Memory]: 16GB DDR3 1600MHz (4GBx4 SODIMMS)
- [Networking]: Wireless PCI 802.11n Up to 300MB/s (Supports 802.11n/g/b)
- [Monitors]: ASUS (VS208N-P) 20” LED Backlit (16:9) Widescreen Monitor (Black) (5ms response time)
That Intel has a trademark on their name for example? :P
1) Netgear is pretty good from what I can tell/have heard.
2) A larger shot of the entire rear would probably be ideal/awesome. <3
3) I think it's good for people to post specs whenever they post pictures so newer folks know what they are looking at. :P Also, wasn't sure which rig this one was. lol
AMD 9600 quad core processor
Geforce GTX 650
320 GB hard drive
Asus M2N68-AM SE2 motherboard
It's a little outdated, but it plays games perfectly at 40-60 fps. Other then the graphics card, I've had the same parts in my computer since 09.
Holy cow, pretty old CPU! Bet you'd see a pretty nice increase in performance for upgrading it!
Also, I daresay your sig looks rather large, I'd see about trying to move the bottom character list part to the right of the picture, because as it is I think it is infract-worthy. =X
Eh, idk I'm weird like that, I like everything to be labeled and organised. I have a P-Touch (is that the name for those little labeling machine?) at home. And I mean, for the graphics card, cache matters a little :P. There a difference between a GTX 680 (2GB) and GTX 680 (4GB)
noted and fixed. And @cpu being old, I found a program that disables a patch that was applied to the brand of processors that im using, and once the patch is disabled, it makes my games get almost 30fps increase so I'm happy with that.(you probably already knew about that though)
No, I know very little about that CPU other than it is old as hell. :P I've actually never owned an AMD CPU system, either, unless my family's Gateway from 1998-2004 was AMD-based, but I honestly can't recall. That was before I knew anything about computers, really, long before.