nigelroberts1
The 'Everything' computer- the 3rd of the i7 4790K's
= The 'everything' computer for the business- the 3rd i7 4790K system. It could be considered 3 computers in one- One desktop configured to easily run 4 separate versions of Windows for different applications for the business. All OS's installed on 4 separate internal drives from selection in Boot manager (or switching UEFI/Legacy in BIOS.) If anything, it should at least should get credit for versatility. One computer with 5 hard drives (3 Conventional, 2 SSD), 3 optical drives- and running 4 different Operating Systems. Windows XP (yes, XP), Windows 7, Windows 8.1 and Windows 10. The Specs?
- Intel i7 4790K CPU, 4.00 Ghz (not overclocked)
- 32 GB DDR3 1600 Mhz Memory (4 X 8 GB)
- MSI Z97 PC Mate Full ATX Board
- NVidia GTX950 Video Card w/ 2 GB GDDR5
- Coolermaster EVO 212 Heatsink/Fan
- 7 (yes, seven 120mm Fans- 3 on the top, two on the front, one on the heatsink and the other exhaust on the back.)
- ATI TV Theatre 550 PRO Video Capture Card
- PCI-E X1 SATA 2-port Card- (hosting DVD-RW Drives)
- Two DVD-RW Drives, 1 Blu-Ray RW drive
- 250 GB Hitachi HDD running Windows XP SP3
- SAMSUNG EVO 850 250 GB SSD running Windows 7 64
- TOSHIBA 256 GB SSD running Windows 8.1 64
- 2 TB Seagate HDD running Windows 10 64.
- 1 TB Western Digital Backup Drive.
- 650 Watt Power Supply. (System draws just over 450W max when under load. CPU gets far more stress than the Video card does.)
6 drives (5 Hard Drives and Blu-Ray Drive) connected to motherboard, 2 DVD-RW drives on PCI-E SATA host card.
All fans spinning at 2500-3000 rpm continuously as CPU is under load quite often for long periods. (absolutely not as noisy as one might think despite.)
System idles at 27 degrees. Under Full load after a couple of hours? 68 Degrees max.
Nigel Robertson
The 'Everything' computer- the 3rd of the i7 4790K's
= The 'everything' computer for the business- the 3rd i7 4790K system. It could be considered 3 computers in one- One desktop configured to easily run 4 separate versions of Windows for different applications for the business. All OS's installed on 4 separate internal drives from selection in Boot manager (or switching UEFI/Legacy in BIOS.) If anything, it should at least should get credit for versatility. One computer with 5 hard drives (3 Conventional, 2 SSD), 3 optical drives- and running 4 different Operating Systems. Windows XP (yes, XP), Windows 7, Windows 8.1 and Windows 10. The Specs?
- Intel i7 4790K CPU, 4.00 Ghz (not overclocked)
- 32 GB DDR3 1600 Mhz Memory (4 X 8 GB)
- MSI Z97 PC Mate Full ATX Board
- NVidia GTX950 Video Card w/ 2 GB GDDR5
- Coolermaster EVO 212 Heatsink/Fan
- 7 (yes, seven 120mm Fans- 3 on the top, two on the front, one on the heatsink and the other exhaust on the back.)
- ATI TV Theatre 550 PRO Video Capture Card
- PCI-E X1 SATA 2-port Card- (hosting DVD-RW Drives)
- Two DVD-RW Drives, 1 Blu-Ray RW drive
- 250 GB Hitachi HDD running Windows XP SP3
- SAMSUNG EVO 850 250 GB SSD running Windows 7 64
- TOSHIBA 256 GB SSD running Windows 8.1 64
- 2 TB Seagate HDD running Windows 10 64.
- 1 TB Western Digital Backup Drive.
- 650 Watt Power Supply. (System draws just over 450W max when under load. CPU gets far more stress than the Video card does.)
6 drives (5 Hard Drives and Blu-Ray Drive) connected to motherboard, 2 DVD-RW drives on PCI-E SATA host card.
All fans spinning at 2500-3000 rpm continuously as CPU is under load quite often for long periods. (absolutely not as noisy as one might think despite.)
System idles at 27 degrees. Under Full load after a couple of hours? 68 Degrees max.
Nigel Robertson