TRENDING NEWS

POPULAR NEWS

Question About A Power Supply With Cpu And These Video Cards.

What video card and power supply should i get to upgrade an HP Envy 700-147c for optimal performance with modern video game graphics?

It depends on how much you want to spend upgrading this 5year old computer. It comes with an AMD A10 processor and 12GB RAM. The RAM is adequate, consider upgrading to 16GB RAM.The current power supply is 300W which is just about capable of running low end modern graphics cards
There is no point in getting a super high end graphics card as the performance is limited by the CPU, motherboard and RAM.
Something like an Nvidia GTX 1060 or Nvidia GTX1070 would probably do but would need a power supply upgrade to 500W with one free PCI-e connector
I wouldn't upgrade beyond that - the performance and reliability of a 5year old computer wouldn't make it economic

Power supply and Motherboard?

I want to buy a new mother board and a new powersupply
What should I look for when buying these things?

Is there a maximum amount of watts a motherboard can handle, I do not want to fry it.


The question is.

When buying a motherboard and a power supply unit what should I look for before buying? ?
(It will be nice to know what these things do EX. look for what kind of CPU it supports. BECAUSE IF IT IS AMD INTEL WILL NOT WORK IN IT.) something like that.

Is there power supplies that may not work for certain systems or motherboards? ?

Video Card and power supply question?

Just add them up, add 10% (more if you overclock) and then get the closest power supply over the recommended amount.
This is the standard chart used by OEM's.

Component Requirement

AGP Video Card 30W - 50W
PCI Express Video 100W - 250W
Average PCI Card 5W - 10W
DVD/CD 20W - 30W
Hard Drive 15W - 30W
Case/CPU Fans 3W (ea.)
Motherboard (w/o CPU or RAM) 50W - 150W
RAM 15W per 1GB
Processor 80W - 140W

Just installed a new power supply, vid card, and Ram. Having freezing problem? ?

When installing new graphics cards i normaly use a third party "driver cleaner" before installing a new driver. I think this is the on i have used in the past. Please do some homework fist before you use it as i haven't used it in a while and I'm not sure if that's the correct one.

http://www.afterdawn.com/software/desktop_software/other_tools/driver_cleaner_pro.cfm

As far as the ram goes you need to make sure you have your BIOS settings correctly set up for the type of ram you are using. these settings are over my head but i always find useful information on this forum:

http://www.hardforum.com/

I also suggest checking temperature in your case. It's a long shot but a new graphics card could be pushing you over the limit.

Help with upgrading my system - graphics card/power supply?

The PCI Express (x16) slot is the black slot above the 2: PCI x1 slots. If you look closely at the motherboard, the slots are actually named. Don't get the fastest graphics card you can afford, because that might bottleneck with your cpu, which is a bit slow. Look for a PCI-E x16 graphics card, and also make sure it is a single slot one.

I also think that the RAM upgrade wouldn't be necessary, as 2GB is plenty. As for the cpu fan, that wouldn't be necessary either, because the processor isn't overclocked, the stock fan would be fine to keep it cool.

Power supplies: As for the power supply, look for an "ATX" power supply, with a minimum of 500w to power your computer with the dedicated graphics card.

PC upgrade question (HP Pavilion a815n)?

More memory is the fastest and cheapest way to increase performance overall. You can go to 4 GB of DDR memory with PC3200 modules. (however only 3 GB will be available to Windows, and you video is going to grab some of that)

If your hard drive is getting full, then a newer larger hard drive will be faster for disk operations and is relatively easy to install.

If you are doing 3-D gaming, then a new graphics card may be worth looking at because you have an unspectacular integrated video system.

A potential problem is whether the machine's power supply can provide enough juice for a modern high performance video card - most of these machines are under-powered. Choosing a mid-range video card that does not required an additional power jumper might be necessary,

However the pavilion a815n appears to have 3 old-school PCI slots and no PCI-e or AGP slot for a video card. That's a dealbreaker. If you want to do gaming, turf this machine and buy a new one. You can't get there from here.


Upgrading the CPU in a branded machine like the HP and Dells is difficult - these machines were not made to be upgraded, and usually have no documentation on the motherboards. CPU upgrades would void the warranty. You would have to do a lot of online research on your particular model.

What Power Supply do i need for my dream computer?

I'm trying to build my dream computer, but this is my first time. So far, I have come to these parts:

Motherboard: MSI Z87-G43 LGA 1150 Intel Z87 HDMI SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 ATX High Performance CF Gaming Intel Motherboard

Processor: Intel Core i5-4430 Haswell 3.0GHz LGA 1150 84W Quad-Core Desktop Processor Intel HD Graphics BX80646I54430

RAM: G.SKILL Ripjaws X Series 8GB (2 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1600 (PC3 12800) Desktop Memory Model F3-12800CL9D-8GBXL

Graphics Card: MSI N650TI TF 2GD5/OC BE GeForce GTX 650 Ti BOOST 2GB 192-bit GDDR5 PCI Express 3.0 SLI Support Video Card

Hard Drive: Seagate Barracuda ST2000DM001 2TB 7200 RPM 64MB Cache SATA 6.0Gb/s 3.5" Internal Hard Drive

Case: COOLER MASTER Elite 430 RC-430-KWN1 Black Steel / Plastic Computer Case

I have chose for the time being to not have an optical drive, though in future I plan to have a blu-ray one of some description...

All parts are being bought from newegg.com

I am an enthusiast in Computers and general technology like this, so please by all means, if you see an error in the compatibility between my parts, or if you have a recommendation of better parts, or even if you think that I made a completely idiotic mistake to a tech person, please give me some feedback. I'd love to hear and learn from someone who has a basic knowledge of this.
My real question is, what power supply do you think I should have? I ask because I am reading this article about how to build computers and im down to power supplies:

http://lifehacker.com/5827145/how-to-build-a-computer-from-scratch-lesson-2-choose-and-buy-your-parts

It tells me that there needs to be a specific amount of wattage, amongst other things, for whatever parts I'm using, but when I tried the wattage calculator link, certain spaces had no options available. Not to mention that I'm much more comfortable asking real people. Thank you so much for your feedback!

What's a good computer tower to get if CPU and power supply are your main priorities?

Regardless of the hardware you intend installing in the case, I would recommend that you spend the extra dollars on a high-end gaming case and PSU.This will make self-service much easier. You don’t need to undo two dozen screws to get to the HDD to replace it and the general lack of screws required for nearly everything except MOBO installation will make life far simpler. The ability to life a single clip that releases all expansion boards instead of having to unscrew each one is a huge bonus.Also, these cases will generally be far more robust and should survive until the next PC form-factor renders it obsolete.

With Mac computers, are graphics cards, video cards and GPUs the same thing?

As other users have mentioned graphics cards and video cards are used almost interchangeably today.However, with a Mac it is important to note that all recent Macs have a GPU, but most recent Macs do not have a Graphics/Video card. A graphics card is a add-on component that is installed in a computer to provide graphics output, and potentially accelerated/advanced 3D processing.So GPU stands for Graphics Processing Unit. This means a piece of silicon that accelerates graphics calculations. Most Macs use the integrated GPU that is part of the Macs CPU. All recent Macs feature Intel processors, and all Intel Desktop processors feature an integrated graphics processor. This saves space in Mac designs, and lowers the cost of Mac hardware to Apple. However, since this isn’t a graphics card or video card it is not upgrade able.The only modern Macs with a graphics card are the Mac Pros, and those don’t actually include a standard PCIe slot to install a standard graphics card.If you want to use an alternative graphics card with a Mac, you will need to get an external GPU enclosure with a thunderbolt port. Even then, you will have to check for driver support for your specific graphics card and MacOS.

TRENDING NEWS