LuckyLyndy said:
Got a few goodies, but need some suggestions and leads on a good Intel
cpu/fan for this mobo. That and a good video/graphic card. I am not
a gamer, but do like to encode and scale video. This is a newbie
question but would it be possible to get a good card that had a HD
tuner built in? Would prefer passive heat sinking as both my last
cards had the fan die or were horribly loud.
I bought that Abit P35 board tonight from New Egg. I have a Antec 900
case, a new power supply, 2 1 GB 240-Pin unbuff Dimm 128X64 DDR2 PC-2
6400 CL4 Crucial RAM...
Now I need a good deal on a matching set of big SATA HD's. A pair of
500 Seagate Barracudas?
But I need that cpu/fan deal first.
)
Lyndon
They don't seem to have a CPUSupport link on the page here, so I guess
you can use anything you want with it. I'm more used to seeing a
chart listing the specific processors.
http://www.uabit.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=32&Itemid=48&page=2&model=386
- Support Intel Core 2 Extreme/Duo/Quad processors with 1333/1066/800MHz FSB
- Support Intel Core 2 Extreme/Quad/Duo & Pentium Dual Core Processors
As to what to buy, it really depends on whether the video tools can
use the four cores of a quad or not. The Q6600 quad 2.4GHz, for example, gives
pretty good performance for price.
http://www23.tomshardware.com/cpu_2007.html?modelx=33&model1=946&model2=882&chart=431
For TV tuner and video, I would buy separate cards. That way, if I need an
upgrade, or the TV standards change, the cards can be replaced separately.
To get an AIW style card, means you're stuck with whatever cruft they
give you for the tuner. There are some nice tuner cards out there, and
you can find duals for example. You can shop for the very latest tuner
cards, whatever has just come out.
For video editing, you probably don't need a monster video card.
With respect to video cards and cooling, it is a tough call. Newegg
lists 89 fanless PCI Express x16 video cards. But my experience
with fanless cards, is you'll probably end up pointing a fan at
them anyways. It helps to keep their idle temperature down. I
have a couple cheap fanless cards, and one of them isn't stable
unless I keep an 80mm case fan pointed at it. If the case fan
breaks, it is easy to replace, so that is an advantage. But if you
were thinking that every fanless card was a stable, silent solution,
it doesn't work like that. (Some have exceptionally high idle
temperatures, which isn't a good thing.)
There are some cards, that use a third party cooler. For example,
one XFX card uses a Zalman cooler. And some people like the Zalman
coolers. They aren't quiet, but they seem to work. (I don't hear
a lot of reports of fan failures on them. They might even be
using ball bearing fans. The cheap video card fans are more l
ikely to be sleeve bearing fans.)
So if you're going fanless, keep a fan handy just in case. I
mount my 80mm fan, on a piece of aluminum angle iron, bolted to
a PCI slot cover hole. One screw is enough to hold the thing in
place. It is a home made solution and I've been using it for
a couple years.
Paul