Aces High Bulletin Board
General Forums => Hardware and Software => Topic started by: cut67 on June 22, 2012, 12:22:44 AM
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Hopefully i can get the money for my bday im planning on getting these 2 items
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814130604
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817139020
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or this one you tell me the better buy, i know i need some good power for the 560. http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817341018
I have a I7 2600S 2.8 GHZ I hope they are both compatible
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Go with the Corsair 650W. I went a bought a 750W version, totally silent, no heat, and is awesome. :aok
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Go with the Corsair 650W. I went a bought a 750W version, totally silent, no heat, and is awesome. :aok
definitely. the corsair is a better quality unit.
depending on the games you play and if you have a 64bit operating system, you might want to look at something with 2gb of memory onboard.
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and corsair will hook up to a i7 2600s?
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It should. It's dummy proof, so the cables will only fit into one particular spot. Your motherboard will have a 24 pin slot for a 24 pin cable, that goes in and you're done. If you have a smart phone, watch a video on how to do it while installing the PSU. Easy as pie.
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The power supply does not hook up to the cpu.
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The power supply does not hook up to the cpu.
your positive? ive been told by many people it hooks up, oh well, give me a power supply that will hook up at about the same price and same watts.
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your positive? ive been told by many people it hooks up, oh well, give me a power supply that will hook up at about the same price and same watts.
The power supply is 'hooked up' to the motherboard which has it's own little built in power supply for the CPU. The motherboard will filter the current, adjust the current and voltage as needed for the CPU. You only hook the PSU directly to peripherals like dvd-rom or hdd drives which can operate at a standard voltage.
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The power supply does not hook up to the cpu.
:lol