Message from @Shura37564
Discord ID: 661027622259785768
@«Hellhound» gtx1050ti
Hmm
I think 240 is too low
300 is minimum wattage required
so better upgrade to a 550 or a 450 if you plan on going lower end
Problem with HP is most likely using a proprietary 24 pin ATX connector
also, does your 1050ti have a 6 pin PCIE connector?
I haven't checked tbh, I'll take a look after I'm done updating some stuff
also, whats your full system specs?
I ended up ordering a new motherboard already tho
whatcha going with?
lemme list out my current specs first
Yeah, most likely that Prebuilt HP PSU isnt gonna fit your new MB
I already ordered a cx550m from corsair
Those units tend to be hit or miss
but, if yours turn out to be good, then its a good PSU
I think there was a bad batch or something
i5 2500 3.3ghz
gtx 1050 ti
16gb ddr3 ram
512gb ssd
2tb hdd
an optical drive
some sort of proprietary motherboard
But i doubt you're going to push it to its maximum rating anyways
yeah, I placed all my parts in a psu calculator, and it said I only needed 360w
Just keep in mind Intel calculates its power usage at idle
yeah
AMD calculates at load iirc
I'll probably end up getting a better psu later on and place this one in a lower end build for my sister
2500 is still an ok CPU, moderate to light gaming of older titles
yeah, I only play 2 games at most anyways
I'll probably end up getting an i7 3770k and OCing that
im the same though since im just running an i5 6600k and 1060, so just one step above ya
aince they're cheap and fit in my motherboard
what about a 4790k?
@«Hellhound» different socket
I'll have to spend more and get a new mobo
I'm a casual gamer anyways
so no need to spend so much
GPU would prolly be the one higher on your list of priorities lmao
I've heard the 3770k can last pretty long even after OCing anyways, my friend has had one at 4.4ghz for 6 years now
but yeah, solid unit overall for low mid gaming
Iirc 3770k is Solder
solder?
The Integrated Heat Spreader (the metal bit you see that has the information) is soldered to the Die (actual silicon)