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The only way this could be true is if it housed the USB-C -> DisplayPort adapter inside itself. Now show me even one single gaming GPU that has a USB-C connector that will work with an adapter and also supports powering the device it connected to.
Such adapters are not bidirectional. So even if there is some obscure gaming GPU that supports this setup, 99.999% won’t.
Got it. The concerns raised earlier in this thread involved the lag or responsiveness of these portable displays. With this, a native DisplayPort model, that concern is eliminated. But yeah, no bueno if your GPU of choice won't drive it; clearly they designed these for laptops.
If these displays become popular enough then I imagine someone, somewhere will offer a combo DP to USB-C cable + power supply.
Any bets on when AMD or NVidia first add USB-C outputs to their cards?
Good luck with thatOr contact the seller of the freakin case... seriously wtf
I don't know if anyone's swapped out the feet on the V2, but for the V1, some folks used feet from a German company called Dynavox. For example:Anyone have some advice about putting new feet on the bottom of the case?
I'm wanting to raise it a bit to improve airflow.
Hah, that's my post
I can confirm that I didn't touch the feet of the v2, it's rock solid on my desk, because the feet now have a rubber coating.
My pok3r and dan case go well together, perfect size.
He does plan on making new window kits... but he has nothing to share in terms of pricing and availability. I was told this one month ago. And since the window kit isn't released yet has anyone managed to close the sidepanel with the asetek 545lc. Or will I have to use no sidepanels till the new window kit?Now that the v3 A4 cases are reaching us I'm wondering if Dan has plans to do another production run of the window kits.
He does plan on making new window kits... but he has nothing to share in terms of pricing and availability. I was told this one month ago. And since the window kit isn't released yet has anyone managed to close the sidepanel with the asetek 545lc. Or will I have to use no sidepanels till the new window kit?
Sweet I got that ram! Building my pc in a month I'll be sure to check your build! I'm sure temps are better then with the window kit..I have, with Corsair vengeance ram. If you check my post history you can see my entire process. Doesn't work with G Skill or other tall memory modules.
Sweet I got that ram! Building my pc in a month I'll be sure to check your build! I'm sure temps are better then with the window kit..
Edit: i cannot find your build i went through all your old posts.
Disclaimer: camera and lighting were not ideal for properly staged photography.
Stats upfront:
Intel 4790K @ 4.4 GHz
Asus Maximus VII Impact
16 GB Ram
512 GB 950 Pro
500 GB 850 Evo
Corsair SP 600
EVGA GTX 1080 8GB FTW Gaming ACX 3.0
Asetek 92mm AIO /w Noctua NF-A9-14
I completed my build, using the AIO, but it wasn't long until I realized a problem - the PSU cables were pushing down on the noctua fan just enough to prevent it from spinning, so temps flew out of control. Currently, the PSU is outside the case while I try to figure it out. Anyone have a similar problem?
In its current state, idle temps are around 37 C with gaming temps about 52 C. I have previously overclocked this CPU to 4.8 GHz successfully on a corsair h100i v2, but with current numbers I think 4.4 GHz is a much safer bet. "Devil's Canyon" and all that.
While I would like to upgrade to a ryzen system (using the Asus strix board) to take advantage of all those threads for my VM workloads, it's been really hard for me to justify a new system (if we ignore Meltdown and Spectre for those following that debacle) given the performance I have under the hood, and this system is only about 4 years old.
I was having the same issue. Like sldr I picked up the Corsair cables eventually (which I'll be posting about later today), but I was also using the stock cables successfully with a 92mm fan grill installed over the noctua fan, then I routed the 2 PCI-E cables up the channel between the PSU and the motherboard, the 24-pin across the noctua and stuffing whatever excess into the space between the radiator and the front ssd panel, etc etc. Twisty ties or zip ties help a bit. You can see some layouts from prevous posts of mine and others, but it's fairly simple to manage all the cables except the 24-pin which requires a little more...attention than the others in my experience.
Edit: I'm late, I see you already found a solution!
Disclaimer: Usual apology for non-ideal camera or lighting conditions.
This is the upgrade from my previous Maximus VII Impact build here.
Specs:
Asus ROG Strix B350i Gaming
AMD Ryzen 7 1800X
EVGA GeForce GTX 1080 8GB FTW Gaming ACX 3.0
Corsair Vengeance LPX 3200MHz @ 32 GB
Samsung 950 Pro 512 GB
Samsung 960 Evo 1 TB
Samsun 850 Evo 500 GB
Corsair SF600 PSU
Asetek 545LC AIO CPU Cooler
Noctua A9x14 92mm Fan
Reevan Vanxie 80x10mm fan
View attachment 54438 View attachment 54439 View attachment 54440 View attachment 54441 View attachment 54442 View attachment 54443 View attachment 54444 View attachment 54445 View attachment 54446
Below are the temps I've gotten on core components. While gaming is not all I do with this rig, it is the most thermally demanding activity even if the device in question is not directly involved in gaming. All temps are reported from HWiNFO after an hour of using it normally.
CPU
Idle temps: 44 C~
Gaming temps: 50-75 C
GPU
Idle: 51 C
Gaming: 75 C
Drives
950 (back M.2 slot, system drive)
Idle: 62 C
Gaming: 73 C
960 (front M.2, virtual machine drive)
Idle: 62 C
Gaming: 74 C
Note: This drive reports 2 temperature sets, so I included the set that was higher.
850 (front panel ssd, game storage)
Idle: 34 C
Gaming: 40 C
Motherboard
Note: This board does not include VRM sensors for some reason, so I am reporting the highest reported temp.
Idle: 60 C
Gaming: 74 C
All temps are with the 80mm fan off. It makes an unbelievable amount of noise even on a silent curve and I haven't determined if it's turbulence or a bad fan. Also, I plan to reroute the 24pin cable into the GPU area as I've seen in other builds as it will make closing the side panel a little easier (everything closes but there is a small amount of pressure on the panel from the cabling). Haven't set up the RGB effects the way I want so I don't have any pics of it lit up, but the lighting zones are pretty tastefully placed.
Also, I have some concerns about the AIO tubes being right over the exhaust fan; is it possible that the water will start heating up from the exhaust, creating a feedback loop?
Much better.View attachment 54634
You know what's friggin hard?
Waiting for the end of the workday, knowing your roomie walked to customs to get your SFX-A4, sitting now at home... argh!
Sorry for the stupid question but I figured I'd ask anyways. I'm only a few parts away from completing my build but I was wondering if it was possible to use the G.Skill TridentZ RGB RAM with the AIO and having the side panel closed? I plan on using the windowed side panel. Just making sure before I dump money on memory
Thank you
It depends; if you're using the 92mm AIO then no, not if you want to close the side panel. I used Corsair vengeance ram because they were low profile.
However, if you're on a v3 and using a 120mm AIO then it shouldn't be an issue.
- The HDPlex seems to only have one accessible screw mount. I may be missing it because I've already mounted my SSD to the front panel. 3M tape neatly solves this.
.
You have to use the included 4x M3 7mm stan offs. Put the stand offs in the four holes at the front and mount the HdPlex on them
Alaberti, why don't you put the hdplex directly on the gpu side panel and use a thicker fan for the AIO ?