I have doubts about this gear [closed]
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I'm not sure if this subdomain is proper for this question but here goes.
So, I believe it's time for me to upgrade my gaming PC. My gear is like this right now:
Motherboard: MSI P67A-G45 (B3)
CPU: Intel i5 2500
GPU: Sapphire R9 270 Dual-X OC GDDR5 2GB 256Bit
RAM: 2x2x4 DDR3 Kingston RAMs with low-mid mHz
Storage: 256 GB Samsung EVO SSD
PSU: Cooler Master RS500 PCAP-J3
After one week of tearing my hair out(Because of the AMD Ryzen and it's unbelievable compatibility issues with RAMs), I've finally created a relatively good gear for my gaming career. I've contacted almost every Motherboard, RAM provider to learn if these work with each other. Here is my planned gear:
Motherboard: MSI B450 Tomahawk
CPU: Ryzen 2600
GPU: EVGA 1070 SC 8GB GDDR5
RAM: Gskill F4 °C16 Ripv K2 2x 8GB, 16GB, 3200 °C16D 16GVKB Memory D4 3200 1,35 V, Ripjawsv Black
Storage: Samsung 256 GB EVO SSD (Stays the same)
PSU: Corsair CX550M
Some notes:
- I'm going to use the Stock Cooler Ryzen CPU provides, so,
Overclocking is not probable in the near future. - I can't go any higher than this, budget wise.
- I'm planning to game in 1080p 60Hz.
- I've already bought the GPU because there was a sale.
What do you think about this gear? I'm hearing issues such as RAM providing lower frequency than expected, non-compatible BIOS versions, PState Overclocking etc. for Ryzen compatible Chipsets.
Thanks!
memory graphics-card cpu motherboard computer-building
New contributor
closed as off-topic by n8te, Kamil Maciorowski, Tetsujin, LPChip, Steven Nov 16 at 8:52
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions seeking for hardware shopping recommendations are off-topic because they are often relevant only to the question author at the time the question was asked and tend to become obsolete quickly. Instead of asking what to buy, try asking how to find out what suits your needs." – n8te, Kamil Maciorowski, Tetsujin, LPChip, Steven
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
add a comment |
up vote
-2
down vote
favorite
I'm not sure if this subdomain is proper for this question but here goes.
So, I believe it's time for me to upgrade my gaming PC. My gear is like this right now:
Motherboard: MSI P67A-G45 (B3)
CPU: Intel i5 2500
GPU: Sapphire R9 270 Dual-X OC GDDR5 2GB 256Bit
RAM: 2x2x4 DDR3 Kingston RAMs with low-mid mHz
Storage: 256 GB Samsung EVO SSD
PSU: Cooler Master RS500 PCAP-J3
After one week of tearing my hair out(Because of the AMD Ryzen and it's unbelievable compatibility issues with RAMs), I've finally created a relatively good gear for my gaming career. I've contacted almost every Motherboard, RAM provider to learn if these work with each other. Here is my planned gear:
Motherboard: MSI B450 Tomahawk
CPU: Ryzen 2600
GPU: EVGA 1070 SC 8GB GDDR5
RAM: Gskill F4 °C16 Ripv K2 2x 8GB, 16GB, 3200 °C16D 16GVKB Memory D4 3200 1,35 V, Ripjawsv Black
Storage: Samsung 256 GB EVO SSD (Stays the same)
PSU: Corsair CX550M
Some notes:
- I'm going to use the Stock Cooler Ryzen CPU provides, so,
Overclocking is not probable in the near future. - I can't go any higher than this, budget wise.
- I'm planning to game in 1080p 60Hz.
- I've already bought the GPU because there was a sale.
What do you think about this gear? I'm hearing issues such as RAM providing lower frequency than expected, non-compatible BIOS versions, PState Overclocking etc. for Ryzen compatible Chipsets.
Thanks!
memory graphics-card cpu motherboard computer-building
New contributor
closed as off-topic by n8te, Kamil Maciorowski, Tetsujin, LPChip, Steven Nov 16 at 8:52
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions seeking for hardware shopping recommendations are off-topic because they are often relevant only to the question author at the time the question was asked and tend to become obsolete quickly. Instead of asking what to buy, try asking how to find out what suits your needs." – n8te, Kamil Maciorowski, Tetsujin, LPChip, Steven
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
Hi there, and welcome to SuperUser. This question is indeed considered Off-Topic, because it will get outdated pretty quickly. As such, this question will be closed. That said, you can post a new question and ask how you can learn to get to the conclusion yourself. Something like: I want to buy a system, what should I look for? Asking for an opinion is never accepted on SuperUser though. We're a Q and A style website, not a forum.
– LPChip
Nov 16 at 8:54
Actually, I did some research and got here from this question: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/270703/…
– HalilM
Nov 16 at 9:56
add a comment |
up vote
-2
down vote
favorite
up vote
-2
down vote
favorite
I'm not sure if this subdomain is proper for this question but here goes.
So, I believe it's time for me to upgrade my gaming PC. My gear is like this right now:
Motherboard: MSI P67A-G45 (B3)
CPU: Intel i5 2500
GPU: Sapphire R9 270 Dual-X OC GDDR5 2GB 256Bit
RAM: 2x2x4 DDR3 Kingston RAMs with low-mid mHz
Storage: 256 GB Samsung EVO SSD
PSU: Cooler Master RS500 PCAP-J3
After one week of tearing my hair out(Because of the AMD Ryzen and it's unbelievable compatibility issues with RAMs), I've finally created a relatively good gear for my gaming career. I've contacted almost every Motherboard, RAM provider to learn if these work with each other. Here is my planned gear:
Motherboard: MSI B450 Tomahawk
CPU: Ryzen 2600
GPU: EVGA 1070 SC 8GB GDDR5
RAM: Gskill F4 °C16 Ripv K2 2x 8GB, 16GB, 3200 °C16D 16GVKB Memory D4 3200 1,35 V, Ripjawsv Black
Storage: Samsung 256 GB EVO SSD (Stays the same)
PSU: Corsair CX550M
Some notes:
- I'm going to use the Stock Cooler Ryzen CPU provides, so,
Overclocking is not probable in the near future. - I can't go any higher than this, budget wise.
- I'm planning to game in 1080p 60Hz.
- I've already bought the GPU because there was a sale.
What do you think about this gear? I'm hearing issues such as RAM providing lower frequency than expected, non-compatible BIOS versions, PState Overclocking etc. for Ryzen compatible Chipsets.
Thanks!
memory graphics-card cpu motherboard computer-building
New contributor
I'm not sure if this subdomain is proper for this question but here goes.
So, I believe it's time for me to upgrade my gaming PC. My gear is like this right now:
Motherboard: MSI P67A-G45 (B3)
CPU: Intel i5 2500
GPU: Sapphire R9 270 Dual-X OC GDDR5 2GB 256Bit
RAM: 2x2x4 DDR3 Kingston RAMs with low-mid mHz
Storage: 256 GB Samsung EVO SSD
PSU: Cooler Master RS500 PCAP-J3
After one week of tearing my hair out(Because of the AMD Ryzen and it's unbelievable compatibility issues with RAMs), I've finally created a relatively good gear for my gaming career. I've contacted almost every Motherboard, RAM provider to learn if these work with each other. Here is my planned gear:
Motherboard: MSI B450 Tomahawk
CPU: Ryzen 2600
GPU: EVGA 1070 SC 8GB GDDR5
RAM: Gskill F4 °C16 Ripv K2 2x 8GB, 16GB, 3200 °C16D 16GVKB Memory D4 3200 1,35 V, Ripjawsv Black
Storage: Samsung 256 GB EVO SSD (Stays the same)
PSU: Corsair CX550M
Some notes:
- I'm going to use the Stock Cooler Ryzen CPU provides, so,
Overclocking is not probable in the near future. - I can't go any higher than this, budget wise.
- I'm planning to game in 1080p 60Hz.
- I've already bought the GPU because there was a sale.
What do you think about this gear? I'm hearing issues such as RAM providing lower frequency than expected, non-compatible BIOS versions, PState Overclocking etc. for Ryzen compatible Chipsets.
Thanks!
memory graphics-card cpu motherboard computer-building
memory graphics-card cpu motherboard computer-building
New contributor
New contributor
New contributor
asked Nov 16 at 8:42
HalilM
1
1
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New contributor
closed as off-topic by n8te, Kamil Maciorowski, Tetsujin, LPChip, Steven Nov 16 at 8:52
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions seeking for hardware shopping recommendations are off-topic because they are often relevant only to the question author at the time the question was asked and tend to become obsolete quickly. Instead of asking what to buy, try asking how to find out what suits your needs." – n8te, Kamil Maciorowski, Tetsujin, LPChip, Steven
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
closed as off-topic by n8te, Kamil Maciorowski, Tetsujin, LPChip, Steven Nov 16 at 8:52
This question appears to be off-topic. The users who voted to close gave this specific reason:
- "Questions seeking for hardware shopping recommendations are off-topic because they are often relevant only to the question author at the time the question was asked and tend to become obsolete quickly. Instead of asking what to buy, try asking how to find out what suits your needs." – n8te, Kamil Maciorowski, Tetsujin, LPChip, Steven
If this question can be reworded to fit the rules in the help center, please edit the question.
Hi there, and welcome to SuperUser. This question is indeed considered Off-Topic, because it will get outdated pretty quickly. As such, this question will be closed. That said, you can post a new question and ask how you can learn to get to the conclusion yourself. Something like: I want to buy a system, what should I look for? Asking for an opinion is never accepted on SuperUser though. We're a Q and A style website, not a forum.
– LPChip
Nov 16 at 8:54
Actually, I did some research and got here from this question: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/270703/…
– HalilM
Nov 16 at 9:56
add a comment |
Hi there, and welcome to SuperUser. This question is indeed considered Off-Topic, because it will get outdated pretty quickly. As such, this question will be closed. That said, you can post a new question and ask how you can learn to get to the conclusion yourself. Something like: I want to buy a system, what should I look for? Asking for an opinion is never accepted on SuperUser though. We're a Q and A style website, not a forum.
– LPChip
Nov 16 at 8:54
Actually, I did some research and got here from this question: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/270703/…
– HalilM
Nov 16 at 9:56
Hi there, and welcome to SuperUser. This question is indeed considered Off-Topic, because it will get outdated pretty quickly. As such, this question will be closed. That said, you can post a new question and ask how you can learn to get to the conclusion yourself. Something like: I want to buy a system, what should I look for? Asking for an opinion is never accepted on SuperUser though. We're a Q and A style website, not a forum.
– LPChip
Nov 16 at 8:54
Hi there, and welcome to SuperUser. This question is indeed considered Off-Topic, because it will get outdated pretty quickly. As such, this question will be closed. That said, you can post a new question and ask how you can learn to get to the conclusion yourself. Something like: I want to buy a system, what should I look for? Asking for an opinion is never accepted on SuperUser though. We're a Q and A style website, not a forum.
– LPChip
Nov 16 at 8:54
Actually, I did some research and got here from this question: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/270703/…
– HalilM
Nov 16 at 9:56
Actually, I did some research and got here from this question: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/270703/…
– HalilM
Nov 16 at 9:56
add a comment |
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Hi there, and welcome to SuperUser. This question is indeed considered Off-Topic, because it will get outdated pretty quickly. As such, this question will be closed. That said, you can post a new question and ask how you can learn to get to the conclusion yourself. Something like: I want to buy a system, what should I look for? Asking for an opinion is never accepted on SuperUser though. We're a Q and A style website, not a forum.
– LPChip
Nov 16 at 8:54
Actually, I did some research and got here from this question: meta.stackoverflow.com/questions/270703/…
– HalilM
Nov 16 at 9:56