Hello, so I am soon going to finish with a little build of mine. I'll receive a motherboard Asrock B85M-Pro4 in the next days, and it is a 8-pin-mobo.
My PSU is kinda' simple - a cheap Makki Atx 70%-utility one, but has its 500 W and a 6-pin connector for GPUs on it and for the CPU it has just 4-pin connector. It's from my previous system.
I have a i5-4690 (non-k) and a stick of 8 gb1600MHz Hynix Cl11 ram, that I am soon planning to pair with another stick of same ram, for being dual channel (tested for work between each other and with mobo and I know it'll work).
I have a GPU GTX 1050, that is pretty much a non-overclocked one, than needs no 6-pin connection, but still it gets its up to 75 W.
Else...simple usbs and monitor...maybe a high-end wi-fi pci card, cuz I have some discounts here in my country, and both my usb-ones seem weak, overheating and useless.
And I am not thinking to overclock anything before I get a new PSU, nor do I plan to run benchmarks/stress tests.
I have talked to the seller to set Intel Turbo Boost to disabled. Bios version is 2.30, if it matters. I am planning to run everything on stock for now without any manual/dynamic OCs. I hope I wouldn't need to downclock something, but if it gets wrong, I can (maybe) take it...
It isn't really impossible for me to find a 4+4/8-pin PSU in the next weeks, but it could cripple my pocket for things, that are generally more important right now than turbo boost or any sort of OC'ing...well, turbo boost is actually a limited and low importance boost, and with this CPU maybe only z-series can bclk-overclock, that I don't really want to know about.
When I search info about it, I see a variety of opininions, but one appears to prevail: 'if everything at stock, no problems'
But also I see things such as ''it might melt'', "it may not power up at all''...damn, I know where to put the 4-pins - further from the USBs, on the other side, on the side where usually is the front side of the assembled PC. Do people reach bad results just cuz of OC'ing, improper placing of the connector and ultra-strong Cpu or hard gpu setups?
What makes me slightly kinda wonder is, while the Pro3 version of this board of Asrock is just a 4-pin-one, wouldn't this work just fine for now? I know the Pro3 is a sliiightly newer one, but technically Pro3 and Pro4 are almost the same.
So my question is: am I doing things kinda' fine, or the risk may be high enough to damage something in, let's say, the next 2 months?
How do you think? I hope someone with more experience, or knowledge would say something for me to get calm...or to maybe frighten me?
The best answer would be to say that if I really overload things, the system would just show it by turning off, or maybe not turning on, the worst...well, you say. Tx!
My PSU is kinda' simple - a cheap Makki Atx 70%-utility one, but has its 500 W and a 6-pin connector for GPUs on it and for the CPU it has just 4-pin connector. It's from my previous system.
I have a i5-4690 (non-k) and a stick of 8 gb1600MHz Hynix Cl11 ram, that I am soon planning to pair with another stick of same ram, for being dual channel (tested for work between each other and with mobo and I know it'll work).
I have a GPU GTX 1050, that is pretty much a non-overclocked one, than needs no 6-pin connection, but still it gets its up to 75 W.
Else...simple usbs and monitor...maybe a high-end wi-fi pci card, cuz I have some discounts here in my country, and both my usb-ones seem weak, overheating and useless.
And I am not thinking to overclock anything before I get a new PSU, nor do I plan to run benchmarks/stress tests.
I have talked to the seller to set Intel Turbo Boost to disabled. Bios version is 2.30, if it matters. I am planning to run everything on stock for now without any manual/dynamic OCs. I hope I wouldn't need to downclock something, but if it gets wrong, I can (maybe) take it...
It isn't really impossible for me to find a 4+4/8-pin PSU in the next weeks, but it could cripple my pocket for things, that are generally more important right now than turbo boost or any sort of OC'ing...well, turbo boost is actually a limited and low importance boost, and with this CPU maybe only z-series can bclk-overclock, that I don't really want to know about.
When I search info about it, I see a variety of opininions, but one appears to prevail: 'if everything at stock, no problems'
But also I see things such as ''it might melt'', "it may not power up at all''...damn, I know where to put the 4-pins - further from the USBs, on the other side, on the side where usually is the front side of the assembled PC. Do people reach bad results just cuz of OC'ing, improper placing of the connector and ultra-strong Cpu or hard gpu setups?
What makes me slightly kinda wonder is, while the Pro3 version of this board of Asrock is just a 4-pin-one, wouldn't this work just fine for now? I know the Pro3 is a sliiightly newer one, but technically Pro3 and Pro4 are almost the same.
So my question is: am I doing things kinda' fine, or the risk may be high enough to damage something in, let's say, the next 2 months?
How do you think? I hope someone with more experience, or knowledge would say something for me to get calm...or to maybe frighten me?
The best answer would be to say that if I really overload things, the system would just show it by turning off, or maybe not turning on, the worst...well, you say. Tx!
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