To help channel water when installing 2 piece J-channel. Around doors and windows, follow these steps: 1. Measure width and height of window or door. At sill – cut J-starter piece 1/8' longer (on each side) than width of sill.
I have never built a pc before. I choose the bitfenix prodigy because I really liked the look and smaller design. I am interested in learning more about pcs/ programming as hobby with occasional gaming. I cant afford a GPU yet and willl get that later. Please help/suggestions with the build below and perhaps cpu cooling advice. Thanks so much any anwser greatly appreciated.
Build: / / CPU: ($169.99 @ Microcenter) Motherboard: ($189.98 @ Outlet PC) Memory: ($72.99 @ Newegg) Storage: ($219.99 @ NCIX US) Case: ($64.99 @ NCIX US) Power Supply: ($79.99 @ Newegg) Total: $797.93 (Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available.) (Generated by PCPartPicker 2013-05-24 12:14 EDT-0400). Most poeple water-cool the Prodigy, I currently air cool mine, but one day I will toss down $400 for a legit water cooling loop.
If you want to keep your optical drive you can fit a 140MM fan to the front and back vents, and one 120MM fan on the top above the MOBO. I get good temps with my air cooled (Hyper 212 Evo) setup with a 3570K @ 4.0 GHz. But with your budget you could probably get a H90 which is a 140MM self contained water cooling unit from Corsair. You could probably OC to over 4 GHz with that thing. You wont need more cooling if you aren't overclocking. But for future overclocking you will need better cooling Awesome. Since you have the prodigy some more questions lol.
1) did you have problems with fitting power supply i read tis a tight fit (bay is shallow) almost everywhere on the great worldwide web. 2) Whats the eaiset way to perform the build.
Ie/ installing what first [currently, i have the case, cpu, and power supply] - still waiting on ssd, mobo, and ram thanks for your help! Your PSU should be fine, but I would suggest getting a Corsair CX600 instead, I have a CX500 that fits fine, plus Corsair is a little better. For installation, install the hard drive and disk drives and power supply first. Then take your motherboard, add the CPU and cooler, then install it in the case. Add the RAM after you have installed the mobo into the case. Lastly, connect all the wiring.
The wiring is a little tight so make sure to get zip ties. Also the middle hard drive cage is removable. I suggest you take it out for better air flow. I don't think you plan on installing 5 hard drives. Thats because you already bought it as you said. If you didnt buy the 3570k earlier, you could have gotten a much better haswell 4670k there is little benefits to getting haswell for desktops unless you want to shell out more money all over and get an Asus ROG mini itx board that is coming out someday now along with a 'haswell ready' psu.
I was never a advocate of itx from the beginning. There is no point when the prodigy is the size of a matx case yet you are limited to only asus rip offs for motherboards because no one else bothers itx given how niche it is. Thats because you already bought it as you said. If you didnt buy the 3570k earlier, you could have gotten a much better haswell 4670k there is little benefits to getting haswell for desktops unless you want to shell out more money all over and get an Asus ROG mini itx board that is coming out someday now along with a 'haswell ready' psu. I was never a advocate of itx from the beginning. There is no point when the prodigy is the size of a matx case yet you are limited to only asus rip offs for motherboards because no one else bothers itx given how niche it is I slightly agree. For sure when it comes to price.
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Mailto adobe digital publishing suite trial and error. The z77 deluxe board of theirs is almost double the price and rarely goes down past $180 in price. Not really against mini itx though.