videopho
Diamond Member
- Apr 8, 2005
- 4,185
- 29
- 91
Originally posted by: Acanthus
Originally posted by: videopho
Originally posted by: Acanthus
Originally posted by: videopho
Originally posted by: Acanthus
Originally posted by: videopho
You're getting a new psu anyway. Why not try the new card (due to arrive from dell) with the new psu. One never has enough wattage.
How do you figure? more wattage doesnt change peroformance at all and costs money...
How? Go ahead swap your supply from 500w to 350w and watch your rig's performances in 3d games.
Lmao, and if i put in a 600w ill be really screaming!!
:roll:
Not really, but at least you have some more headroom, in the event the load requires more juice on demand.
No you are the one who should take it yourself, dude.
LMAO, that isnt how it works. If there isnt enough power, it will freeze, severely slow down, or crash entirely. Every part consumes a maximum amount. If your PSUs max load on each rail is higher than that, you have a perfectly stable system. Increasing your PSU will do NOTHING but cost you money.
I don't get what youre not getting here.
You're contradicting yourself.
That's why you always need a beefy psu in order to prevent freezes, slow down, or crashes before they actually happen.
