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Yes that's everything you need for the components. Since you won't have any room for any silver get this algaecide. You'll definitely need a funnel too.
Also, 15 feet of tubing is way more than you need. Like 7 feet would for any accidental miscuts would leave you with extra. You only have to travel from the CPU to the top of the case twice, plus like 6-8 inches off the T. You'll only need 4 barbs. If you want to clamp all three points of the T you'll need 2 more (total of 7).
There is a reservoir on the pump/block by the way. I originally listed the T fitting/plug because the res on the block looks like a pain in the butt to fill, and to see how much is in it. When you do install it all, I'd fill up the res on the block too before you start it along with the T. After that you should be good. Just keep feeding it the distilled water until you have extra in the T. It will probably be easier to get air out if you lay it down.
I've never used a clamp for the fillport since it's always pointing up, and never totally full. I don't even really use the fill portion of the port, I just completely take the fillport out. Funnel fits easier in just the tubing. But it's 99 cents so might as well.
Only need 4 barbs not 7
Well, I can get my x58 EVGA to boot with the L5639 ...
... but apparently it doesn't like Registered ECC.
Any suggestions on a motherboard that will work with the L5639 and Registered ECC, on the cheap? I'm about to just sell everything and start over with something else, I've already put too much money/time into this ZFS project.
LGA1366 Intel® Xeon® processor
This motherboard supports the latest Intel® Xeon processors in LGA1366 package with integrated memory controller to support 3-channel (6 DIMMs) DDR3 memory. Supports Intel® QickPath Interconnect (QPI) with a system bus of up to 6.4GT/s and a max bandwidth of up to 25.6GB/s. It can support DDR3 ECC un-buffered memory.
You need ECC? The chip should run fine without it.
Well, I can get my x58 EVGA to boot with the L5639 ...
... but apparently it doesn't like Registered ECC.
Any suggestions on a motherboard that will work with the L5639 and Registered ECC, on the cheap? I'm about to just sell everything and start over with something else, I've already put too much money/time into this ZFS project.
but I'd really prefer it for ZFS,
I must be a real dumb ass what is a ZFS used for? sounds like something that would be used in a data center...was just curious
I'm glad I found this thread. I've been kicking around the idea of a whole new build but instead just upgraded my i7 950 to a X5650 for $100. I did a basic OC to 3.4ghz and Ill try to push that farther once I get some extra time. I am really surprised at how much more responsive the system feels with the X5650, I wouldnt have expected daily usage to be that different from the i7. Now I just have to try and hold my horses on buying a new GPU until Maxwell drops later this year, trying to game at 4k with a single 680 is rough but Ill soldier on
While I myself am running Mushkin, I can't recommend them any more. Their customer service is top notch, but the sheer volume of bad sticks I've received from them is absolutely mind boggling.
<story+rant>
I bought two 3x 4GB kits and 1x 4x 4GB kit of 999057(1600MHz 7-7-7-24 1T 1.65v). Within 3 months all 10 sticks had failed. Mushkin replaced all of the sticks, and then two months later all of those were dead - never having been run anything but stock settings.
Anyway, six months goes by... Serious fucking nightmare of sticks dying left and right... They ended up sending me stuff that is on different IC's, totally different speed ratings/voltage, and I haven't had issues with these sticks yet.
I have to admit, I'm seriously put off by the fact that I now have memory chips in my rig that are from three different manufacturers and three different speeds/voltage ratings. Not only that, the performance of these modules is not up to the same level of performance as the sticks I originally purchased.
</story+rant>
no such luck...managed to pass it a few times down to 1.95 but after that i had to keep raising it back to where it was...to get it totally stable...i think its just a p6tdeluxv1 thing and using 200blck. Did you manage to bring the QPI voltage down at all?
You can reduce the uncore speed below 2x and it'll help with that. You should be able to go down to 1.5x in steps of 0.1.
Don't see the point. Better cooling doesn't equate to more blocks. If you want better cooling you get more radiator area. Even then you can only ever cool to the ambient temp in the room.
no such luck...managed to pass it a few times down to 1.95 but after that i had to keep raising it back to where it was...to get it totally stable...i think its just a p6tdeluxv1 thing and using 200blck
you lost me there...are you referring to uclk freq? is it listed it any of the bios screenshots i have posted? they may not have that option our bios
So I was messing around with the overclock on my L5639. I had the vcore at 1.3375v with a 200 BLCK (3.2GHZ). I took it down to 199 and I was able to get the v core down to 1.3125v. I think I could have gone a few more notches too with out much problems but I ran out of time. It was stable with OCCT for 35-40 minutes at each increment going down from the 1.3375v. Not 24 hours, I know, but that's usually stable long enough to work for me. Temps went down too obviously. They hover around mid 40s instead of low - mid 50s with an H55 now.
I guess if you have a high vcore try lowering the BLCK down one. Worth a try. It's only a 16mhz loss.
Yes, in asus bios it's "UCLK" "Uncore Clock". Your screenshot shows Auto, but your cpuz with your memory speed shows it's running at 2x(Memory Speed). One of the changes intel made from bloomfield to gulftown was allowing the uncore speed to be lowered to 1.5x from 2x.
I'm not certain if this carried over to the xeons. If you actually look at the xeon and 990x on ark.intel.com, you can see that the xeon is actually rated to have higher bandwidth. But it's worth checking out.
*snip*
the way i read it you have to set it to double you ram speed...so no choice there
pretty nice test....reminded me i had my ram voltage to low (auto on 1.65 volt sticks defaults it to low) as it failed first pass...after that all was good
You can lower it to 1.5x ram speed on gulftown architecture. Auto is supposed to do that. You should be able to run your UCLK as low as 2400MHz with 1600MHz memory. Naturally, performance will be better at 2x, but if you need so much voltage for 2x, it's not worth frying your chip over.
The speed of the UCLK is the primary reason why you have to increase QPI/DRAM voltage.
Your screenshot shows you can go down to 2406MHz.Can you post a pic of the same options menu in your bios....if yours is worded the same and it works on yours i'll give it a try on mine (on the other hand if its worded differently that would suggest your board is capable of something mine is not)...could also run a test or 2 to see if it really lowers performance any if at all.....looking at you cinebench scores in the past it sure doesn't seem to hurt. mine struggles just to match your low end scores and maybe just for shits and giggles run the hyperpi twice and we can compare those scores as well...i have no doubt yours is faster again