PSU Advice
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Originally posted by veegHello
One thing the psu gets noisey under high loads.
I will tag our expert. @phillpower2Comment
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It would help @phillpower2 if he also knew your computer specs.
I suggest.
[HEADING=3]Can you Download and run and then post. Speccy - Free Download
To publish a Speccy profile to the Web:[/HEADING]
[HEADING=3]In Speccy, click File, and then click Publish Snapshot.[/HEADING]
In the Publish Snapshot dialog box, click Yes to enable Speccy to proceed.
Speccy publishes the profile and displays a second Publish Snapshot dialog box. You can open the URL in your default browser, copy it to the clipboard, or close the dialog box.
The last part of each URL is randomized, so only people you provide with the URL will be able to find your profile.
The information given in Speccy cannot be used by anyone to hack your systemComment
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Originally posted by PeterOzIt would help @phillpower2 if he also knew your computer specs.
I suggest.
[HEADING=3]Can you Download and run and then post. Speccy - Free Download [/HEADING]
[HEADING=3]To publish a Speccy profile to the Web:[/HEADING]
[HEADING=3]In Speccy, click File, and then click Publish Snapshot.[/HEADING]
In the Publish Snapshot dialog box, click Yes to enable Speccy to proceed.
Speccy publishes the profile and displays a second Publish Snapshot dialog box. You can open the URL in your default browser, copy it to the clipboard, or close the dialog box.
The last part of each URL is randomized, so only people you provide with the URL will be able to find your profile.
The information given in Speccy cannot be used by anyone to hack your system
CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 7600X
GPU: RX 7800XT
RAM: 32GB DDR5 5600Mhz
Mobo: ASUS Prime A620M-K
OS: Win 11 Pro 64-bit
I can do the speccy thing once I’m back from workComment
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This is going over old ground as the OP was recommended this PSU in their previous thread here that had to be marked as they abandoned it
Originally posted by Filip RistovskiAs I could see in the psu tier list, in the Tier A there’s a psu Thermaltake | Toughpower : GF3 <=1200W, so I guess that includes the psu I’m trying to buy?
You can`t afford to have any grey area when it comes to the PSU so we need to know the actual brand of the GPU, if AMDs own fine but brands like ASUS, Gigabyte, Power Color and Sapphire etc may have a higher power requirement.
I use and suggest only four brands but for others that may read this thread, if a PSU from a lesser know brand is not on the Tier list don’t purchase it.
CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 7600X
RAM: 32GB DDR5 [COLOR=rgb(184, 49, 47)]5600Mhz
If not already you will at some point have stability issues running the RAM at 5600 which is some 400MT/s faster than the CPU can handle long term, this likewise has been explained previously.[/COLOR]Comment
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Originally posted by phillpower2Doesn[ICODE]t work like that I[/ICODE]m afraid, proof of this being the Toughpower GF3 1650W being rated at a lowly – Tier B • Mid-range
You can`t afford to have any grey area when it comes to the PSU so we need to know the actual brand of the GPU, if AMDs own fine but brands like ASUS, Gigabyte, Power Color and Sapphire etc may have a higher power requirement.
I use and suggest only four brands but for others that may read this thread, if a PSU is not on the Tier list don’t purchase it.
Have you had this build up and running yet.Comment
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Originally posted by phillpower2This is going over old ground as the OP was recommended this PSU in their previous thread here that had to be marked as they abandoned it
Doesn[ICODE]t work like that I[/ICODE]m afraid, proof of this being the Toughpower GF3 1650W being rated at a lowly – Tier B • Mid-range
You can`t afford to have any grey area when it comes to the PSU so we need to know the actual brand of the GPU, if AMDs own fine but brands like ASUS, Gigabyte, Power Color and Sapphire etc may have a higher power requirement.
I use and suggest only four brands but for others that may read this thread, if a PSU is not on the Tier list don’t purchase it.
If not already you will at some point have stability issues running the RAM at 5600 which is some 400MT/s faster than the CPU can handle long term, this likewise has been explained previously.Comment
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If not upgrading anything but the CPU you would not require a PSU upgrade, if set on an PSU upgrade the PSU with a ten year warranty here will do you, be sure to read the More Info: More about the product…Comment
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Originally posted by phillpower2If not upgrading anything but the CPU you would not require a PSU upgrade, if set on an PSU upgrade the PSU with a ten year warranty here will do you, be sure to read the More Info: More about the product…Comment
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I do not use or recommend Thermaltake but that is my preference and it doesn`t have to be yours.
The nearest that I can get to reference for the version of Themaltake PSU that you ask about is the 750W RGB version and that has been rated as Mid Range but without any evidence of any testing, not for me based on that alone.Comment
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Originally posted by phillpower2I do not use or recommend Thermaltake but that is my preference and it doesn`t have to be yours.
The nearest that I can get to reference for the version of Themaltake PSU that you ask about is the 750W RGB version and that has been rated as Mid Range but without any evidence of any testing, not for me based on that alone.Comment
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Originally posted by phillpower2If not upgrading anything but the CPU you would not require a PSU upgrade, if set on an PSU upgrade the PSU with a ten year warranty here will do you, be sure to read the More Info: More about the product…Comment
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