Yeah I had this grim realization the other day installing my new MB like 'christ I've had this case for ages'God, the 600T came out in 2010! Barely seems like yesterday!

That 760T looks pretty slick though.
Yeah I had this grim realization the other day installing my new MB like 'christ I've had this case for ages'God, the 600T came out in 2010! Barely seems like yesterday!
God, the 600T came out in 2010! Barely seems like yesterday!
Woop.
Edit: Dear God this picture is severely outdated, I need to get some updated pics.
DSCN0898 by [email protected], on Flickr
I'm assuming you're talking about a full loop and not one of those all-in-one coolers. In that case, it's only worth doing if you're doing some serious overclocking and have components that can be overclocked very well, otherwise no. It's so expensive too.You should switch to a water cooling system. They are a bit more expensive but are worth the price!
Because it works for me really wellI'm assuming you're talking about a full loop and not one of those all-in-one coolers. In that case, it's only worth doing if you're doing some serious overclocking and have components that can be overclocked very well, otherwise no. It's so expensive too.
Water cooling isn't the best thing in the world. Why do you keep suggesting it?
OK... well, it doesn't work for everybody and nor is it in everybody's budget. What water cooling are you recommending too? Full loop or a cheap AIO unit?Because it works for me really well
I keep things cool. I use full loop but I recommend a cheap one for his useOK... well, it doesn't work for everybody and nor is it in everybody's budget. What water cooling are you recommending too? Full loop or a cheap AIO unit?
What exact setup do you have and how much overclocking do you do? Sounds like you like your overclocking or you like to keep things very cool.
I keep things cool. I use full loop but I recommend a cheap one for his use
^ This.No offense but I'm using the optimal cooling for my setup, trust me. My motherboard doesn't support heavy overclocking and running at cooler temps would help me get a couple hundred MHz at most. Not worth the money, by a long shot. Particularly since I'm using an older chip that will be replaced soon.
No offense but I'm using the optimal cooling for my setup, trust me. My motherboard doesn't support heavy overclocking and running at cooler temps would help me get a couple hundred MHz at most. Not worth the money, by a long shot. Particularly since I'm using an older chip that will be replaced soon.
You are an AMD guy... but OK.
Lol what does that have to do with this? ..
Back in their day the 8320s were quite a good budget option and whilst the performance wasn't the same as the i5 3570K or any other i5 they were quite a bit cheaper so I used to recommend them a lot especially since for a gaming rig you could put more money into the graphics card which is what mattered most. Back in 2012 or 2013 an FX-8320 paired with a 7970 or a GTX 680 was a good option and better than an i5 with a 7870 or a GTX 660 Ti and both would come in at the same price. The trouble is it's not 2012 or 2013 anymore and these CPUs are now outdated and it's now worth spending the extra on the i5, just for DDR4 RAM and the latest technology alone really. Hopefully when Zen comes out that will all change.