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KSP1 Computer Building/Buying Megathread


Leonov

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Haha, I see you changed the video card to AMD. Everyone seems to prefer one or the other about the same way that we Americans vote republican or democrat.

I have no idea how soon I'll be able to make my purchase, and I expect a lot of possible price fluctuation almost daily, so it's good to have multiple options for each item in case one of them is on sale at the right time. I'm hoping to place an order later this week, but it may be next week before the money is available.

My biggest worry about a smaller SSD would be choosing which games to install on it and which to put on the HDD. I know the main benefit of the SSD is the OS, but with the 1 TB size I'm pretty sure I could fit the vast majority of my games on it. I'll have to think on that some more.

Also, regardless of which case I choose, I will likely buy a couple extra fans to help with the air flow. Each case only comes with 2 or 3 but has slots for around 7.

The GPU thing is a pretty accurate assumption.

Do think about the SSD while having games on it will give slightly better load time I can't really tell the difference.

I would hold off on the extra fans. On the higher priced cases the 2 or 3 that they come with are really enough and the extra slots are just marketing.

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I'm fascinated by the newer designs for cases. They've made some significant improvements since I built my last PC 6+ years ago. Most cases have moved the PSU to the bottom now and they have much better cable management than before (like modular PSU cables). SSDs didn't even exist back then, well at least not in the mainstream - I had never heard of them until a few months later.

I can't wait, I always love building a new PC.

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How about either of these two cases then:

Fractal Design Define R4

Corsair Obsidian Series 450D

I have the Fractal Define R3 (the R4 is a minor upgrade, almost identical) It's a pretty nice case. I bought mine for the 8 3.5" internal bays, but it's also very quiet (even with dual Xeons in it, though I did have to fabricate brackets for socket 771) :)

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I have the Fractal Define R3 (the R4 is a minor upgrade, almost identical) It's a pretty nice case. I bought mine for the 8 3.5" internal bays, but it's also very quiet (even with dual Xeons in it, though I did have to fabricate brackets for socket 771) :)

How hot do the internals get?

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I thought I was being clever by coding a function that allows the program to use the full range of an integer (-2147483648 to 2147483647), but it seems the conversion back to normal values takes too much computing power to make it worth the hassle. Where before up to 1500 items could be displayed before things really bogged down, now just 500 is enough. That is without some more complex calculations that still need to be implemented.

Maybe I would be better off multiplying everything by two or three orders of magnitude to reduce rounding errors and leave it at that. Though I just realised that if you limit yourself to the positive part of the integer, you only need a fudge conversion factor to translate your coordinates pretty much in one simple division. I just am not too comfortable running the whole thing 1 to 1. Rounding errors would become large, causing problems in different areas.

Edited by Camacha
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Evening all, with Christmas and Black Friday rolling around its time for my annual "Do I need moar" brain drain.

Specs are below, just looking for the largest single improvement I can make to this setup. Obviously want to push KSP faster but also looking with an eye to XCom 2 (squee!)

Gigabyte GA-MA770T-UD3 AMD 770

AMD Phenom II X4 555 Black Edition 3.2GHz Socket AM3 6MB Cache

Corsair 8GB (4x2GB) DDR3 1333MHz Memory Kit Unbuffered CL9

XFX HD 5770 1GB XXX Editon GDDR 5 Arctic Power 700W PSU

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KSP will appreciate a modern Intel CPU. Of course that also means a new motherboard, and if you go Skylake you might need new RAM too.

Many other games will gain more benefit from a graphics card upgrade, but check you have a quality power supply and what the wattage is.

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Something you may need to watch out for: I noticed the price of the Core i5 6600K has spiked in the last few days and it seems like there may be a shortage. I got it for £200, the same as it was around launch, but I've no idea when mine will arrive. Some retailers have pushed the price up to £220 or even £250 and on some sites the processor is completely absent.

Turns out you were right. I came home from a long weekend vacation in the mountains ready to place my order for PC parts and the i5 6600K was sold out on Newegg. :( Then I did a new search and found it in stock at my local Microcenter store and on sale to boot! I was able to go buy it and pick it up for only $213, more than $50 less than Newegg's price before they went out of stock. I was also able to grab a AOC 27"

  • 2560 x 1440 1ms monitor on sale for $299, the same price that Newegg has it, so I saved a little on potential shipping costs.

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What do you think of this build? It's mainly for lower-end graphics games like Besiege or Rocket League. I'm trying to keep the price down as much as possible.

CPU: Pentium Anniversary Edition G2358 (Planning on overclocking it because why would you not)

Motherboard: MSI H81M-P33 (MicroATX)

GPU: EVGA GTX 950 2GB

RAM: Crucial Ballistix Sport 2x4GB

Cooler: Cooler Master Hyper 212 Evo

PSU: EVGA 500W

Case: Corsair Carbide Series 200R (With a window, because... windows.)

Monitor: Acer S220HQL 21.5" LCD

Keyboard: Redragon S101 VAJRA

Mouse: Redragon CENTROPHOROUS (Not the best keyboard/mouse combo, but it's $27 USD for both and the closest thing to an FPS I'm going to play on this thing is Space Engineers)

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(This isn't directly relevant to computer building, but I assumed the mods wouldn't want another thread. The title also says "All questions acceptable", so I'm going to put this here.)

(This isn't really the problem. Well, it sort of is.) I've recently been having an issue with my computer, mainly that the start menu and several default Windows applications no longer function correctly or at all.

The desktop also takes a very long time to load (upwards of 5 minutes) and the hard disk seems far slower than usual (only at < 30% usage constantly) and just... Takes longer for everything. After a lengthy conversation with Microsoft, they came to the conclusion that Windows was somehow corrupted. After this I ran the default Windows app to check that the hard disk wasn't failing or corrupted (Which showed nothing) as well as the Western Digital version (Which also registered nothing.) So there's apparently nothing wrong with that, so I ran a malware scan, which also showed nothing, and I also haven't downloaded anything in a few weeks. So unless a part of the drive somehow got messed up and now isn't registering as being corrupted, I don't know whats causing this (It could be malware and just didn't show up until recently, but it still didn't register anything on the scan, so...) If you have any idea what's causing this, please reply, and if nothing else I'll try reinstalling everything later. Thanks.

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What do you think of this build? It's mainly for lower-end graphics games like Besiege or Rocket League. I'm trying to keep the price down as much as possible.

CPU: Pentium Anniversary Edition G2358 (Planning on overclocking it because why would you not)

Motherboard: MSI H81M-P33 (MicroATX)

GPU: EVGA GTX 950 2GB

RAM: Crucial Ballistix Sport 2x4GB

Cooler: Cooler Master Hyper 212 Evo

PSU: EVGA 500W

Case: Corsair Carbide Series 200R (With a window, because... windows.)

Monitor: Acer S220HQL 21.5" LCD

Keyboard: Redragon S101 VAJRA

Mouse: Redragon CENTROPHOROUS (Not the best keyboard/mouse combo, but it's $27 USD for both and the closest thing to an FPS I'm going to play on this thing is Space Engineers)

I wouldn't get a pentium even overclocked it won't be that good.

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i was wondering is gsync worth it? i was looking for a 1440p monitor and the monitors with g-sinc are to expensive so what if i buy a 144hz monitor to what framerate will

v-sync limit my fps?

any sugestions ?

edit: gpu: gigabyte g1 gtx 970 windforce

will it even run any games at that resulotion with max setings?

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I wouldn't get a pentium even overclocked it won't be that good.

I have a Pentium G3258 and it performs quite well when overclocked. In single thread applications like KSP it will keep up with higher end i5s and i7s at a fraction of the cost, currently it is the best choice for a KSPer on a modest budget as there's nothing at that price point that comes close. If you're doing very heavily threaded stuff an AMD might be better, but most games aren't that heavily threaded (and Intel's better IPC can make up for the core count to some degree).

TechReport's rather glowing review: http://techreport.com/review/26735/overclocking-intel-pentium-g3258-anniversary-edition-processor

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I wouldnt buy a monitor with gsync, since you have to pay quite much extra and it will only work with Nvidia cards, so its not realy future proof. AMDs Freesync is a bit better in this, since its an open standart (so maybe Nvidia will support it one day) and it also doesnt make the monitors very expensive...

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Vsync lets the GPU only produce an image when the monitor is ready to recieve it. For 144hz that means it will produce up to 144 fps, (which is unlikely since most programs are limited by your CPU before), not more. If your PC isnt fast enough for 144hz (that will happen very often!) it will send a new image to the monitor every 2 refresh cycles of the monitor, you will see "only" 72fps. It can reduce the speed even futher.

The advantage of Vsync is that your monitor wont show half images, e.g. when your GPU finished a new image while the monitor is still busy showing the first one (know as tearing, can be realy ugly). The disadvantage is that when your PC is to weak for a constant framerate you get reduced to half of the monitor framerate, even when its able to calculate 90% of the required FPS.

This is what Gsync and Freesync try to slove, both make your monitor adjust to the fps of your PC, not the other way around.

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oh ok i just didn't know vsync worked thanks but as far as i know many high end monitors let you set thier refreshrate in thier menue so would it not be better to set my monitor to a refreshrate slightly lower than my avrage fps??

Edited by masiboss
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Something you may need to watch out for: I noticed the price of the Core i5 6600K has spiked in the last few days and it seems like there may be a shortage. I got it for £200, the same as it was around launch, but I've no idea when mine will arrive. Some retailers have pushed the price up to £220 or even £250 and on some sites the processor is completely absent.
Remember I mentioned this? Well about two weeks after placing my order I telephoned the supplier and was informed they were expecting new stock in January. So in the end I've had to switch my build to the i3 6100 anyway, since I don't want to wait that long.

I guess the lesson learned should be, don't order computer stuff from places that don't have it in stock! And perhaps don't dither about purchasing so much; if I'd moved earlier I probably would have got the i5.

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Remember I mentioned this? Well about two weeks after placing my order I telephoned the supplier and was informed they were expecting new stock in January. So in the end I've had to switch my build to the i3 6100 anyway, since I don't want to wait that long.

I guess the lesson learned should be, don't order computer stuff from places that don't have it in stock! And perhaps don't dither about purchasing so much; if I'd moved earlier I probably would have got the i5.

I remember you saying this, and sure enough by the time I had the money to place an order Newegg was sold out. When I searched other retailers online for it I really lucked out and found that the local MicroCenter store a couple miles away had 25 in stock. So I ordered one and did an in-store pickup. Better yet, it was on sale so I only paid $213. I'm now in the process of configuring a killer new PC and will be busy with installations and screwing with settings for the next few days - something that is both fun and boring at the same time, LOL. I did manage to OC the i5 6600K to 4.5 GHz, I'm not sure if I should push it much further.

Also, I have G.Skill Ripjaws V 2400 DDR4 16 GB (2x8 GB) memory that seems to be only running at 2133. Does this mean that the memory was mislabeled or do I need to OC the memory to correct it? I've never OCed memory before so I'm not sure how to go about doing it.

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Also, I have G.Skill Ripjaws V 2400 DDR4 16 GB (2x8 GB) memory that seems to be only running at 2133. Does this mean that the memory was mislabeled or do I need to OC the memory to correct it? I've never OCed memory before so I'm not sure how to go about doing it.

Certain generations of chips are rated up to a certain speed. Memory manufacturers will often make memory that can clock higher, but the system will not automatically do this for you. You (generally) will need to tell the system to run at these higher speeds.

If you go into your BIOS/UEFI, you will very likely see a relevant setting. Each manufacturer tends to call things differently, but if you see 2133 somewhere, chances are you are in the right place.

Edited by Camacha
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I have a Pentium G3258 and it performs quite well when overclocked. In single thread applications like KSP it will keep up with higher end i5s and i7s at a fraction of the cost, currently it is the best choice for a KSPer on a modest budget as there's nothing at that price point that comes close. If you're doing very heavily threaded stuff an AMD might be better, but most games aren't that heavily threaded (and Intel's better IPC can make up for the core count to some degree).

TechReport's rather glowing review: http://techreport.com/review/26735/overclocking-intel-pentium-g3258-anniversary-edition-processor

Hun. didn't know that.

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