Hi All,
Building a new rig, and plan on going with the GTX480 for now and if prices drop in a couple of years getting another one for SLI to get a performance boost (or getting a different card in 3-4 years, depending on what seems like the best option at the time).
The power drain from the GTX480 is heinous though, pushing up into the 850-950W range for SLI with even very moderate overclocking (which is all I would do anyway, not planning on OC'ing the CPU at all and only going to push the RAM and GPU slightly if necessary). I'm also of course trying to watch the wallet, which is a problem when there's a huge price jump when you break 650W it seems. To top it all off, I'm looking to keep noise levels down as the computer is for bedroom use. Here's the current rig spec I plan:
CPU: i7-920 or 930
MoBO: Gigabyte GA-EX58-UD5 or something similar
RAM: 3x2GB DDR31600 triple channel Patriot Viper CL8 or OCZ Platinum CL7
HDD: 1x WD Caviar Black 640GB, 1x WD Caviar Black 1TB (upgrade to SSD in a couple years)
Optical: Samsung SH-S223L
GPU: GTX 480 (another in SLI potentially in 2 years), or wait til Q3 to see what comes out
Case: Antec P193
PSU: CP-1000 (only 840W on +12v rails)
So, what I'm wondering is instead of going with the CP-1000, which is ~$130, could I go with a 650W supply for now, which is far cheaper (like the Modu82+), and add an additional PSU if I need more power later.
I saw a few articles on how to do it, but I'm wondering how that actually works out. Do you end up connecting different components to different PSUs? Or is there one output? Does that have any effect on power performance and PSU fan regulation? Thanks!
Building a new rig, and plan on going with the GTX480 for now and if prices drop in a couple of years getting another one for SLI to get a performance boost (or getting a different card in 3-4 years, depending on what seems like the best option at the time).
The power drain from the GTX480 is heinous though, pushing up into the 850-950W range for SLI with even very moderate overclocking (which is all I would do anyway, not planning on OC'ing the CPU at all and only going to push the RAM and GPU slightly if necessary). I'm also of course trying to watch the wallet, which is a problem when there's a huge price jump when you break 650W it seems. To top it all off, I'm looking to keep noise levels down as the computer is for bedroom use. Here's the current rig spec I plan:
CPU: i7-920 or 930
MoBO: Gigabyte GA-EX58-UD5 or something similar
RAM: 3x2GB DDR31600 triple channel Patriot Viper CL8 or OCZ Platinum CL7
HDD: 1x WD Caviar Black 640GB, 1x WD Caviar Black 1TB (upgrade to SSD in a couple years)
Optical: Samsung SH-S223L
GPU: GTX 480 (another in SLI potentially in 2 years), or wait til Q3 to see what comes out
Case: Antec P193
PSU: CP-1000 (only 840W on +12v rails)
So, what I'm wondering is instead of going with the CP-1000, which is ~$130, could I go with a 650W supply for now, which is far cheaper (like the Modu82+), and add an additional PSU if I need more power later.
I saw a few articles on how to do it, but I'm wondering how that actually works out. Do you end up connecting different components to different PSUs? Or is there one output? Does that have any effect on power performance and PSU fan regulation? Thanks!
