Hi guys,
Here is my situation. I run a small project studio where I do video and audio production work. Recently I upgraded from a Gygabyte motherboard/AMD FX-8350 to a MSI x99a gaming pro carbon motherboard with an intel 6800k processor.
The MSI board gave me nothing but issues from day one. The first one had major USB 3.0 issues out of the box where Windows 10 was constantly making the USB connect/Disconnect sound and giving me some sort of USB warning. So I had to tear the board out, send it back. Here I am, not even 3 months later, and my second board needs RMAed due to random system crashes and PCIe slot issues and I am now back to my Gigabyte/AMD FX-8350 setup. It's not as fast, but it is reliable and stable. I stand behind Gigabyte boards, as they have been rock solid for me on all my builds and all my clients builds.
This was the first time I left them for the MSI board, and I'll admit, it was the pretty LED lighting addition that did me in.... that's what I get for abandoning my 'function over fashion' moto. The board had great specs, but it just wasn't reliable. I have a theme going for the stduio though, and this added to it.
I have fallen behind on a lot of studio projects dealing with this issue on the MSI board and I am looking to purchase a new board for my intel 6800k cpu. I didn't spend over $600 on that chip to let it sit in it's box. I went out and purchased a Corsair 760T case with the transparent door for the MSI's LED features, so I am looking to utlize the LED with some reliability.
I just discovered the Gigabyte GA-X99 Ultra Gaming board:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813128928
To make sure I don't fall further behind on my projects. I want to get this board along with a separate SSD drive to put together on the bench and test it out before I pull apart my current case and switch everything out. I want to make sure it runs solid and is ready to go so I can just jump back into my projects when i do swap it out without worrying about crashes and what not. I planned on stress testing the CPU in it and everything.
Can I run this board outside a case for a while to test it out and make sure it will be stable? And if so, what do you guys suggest as far as what kind of surface to set it on? What do you recommend I do for this?
Thanks in advance.
Here is my situation. I run a small project studio where I do video and audio production work. Recently I upgraded from a Gygabyte motherboard/AMD FX-8350 to a MSI x99a gaming pro carbon motherboard with an intel 6800k processor.
The MSI board gave me nothing but issues from day one. The first one had major USB 3.0 issues out of the box where Windows 10 was constantly making the USB connect/Disconnect sound and giving me some sort of USB warning. So I had to tear the board out, send it back. Here I am, not even 3 months later, and my second board needs RMAed due to random system crashes and PCIe slot issues and I am now back to my Gigabyte/AMD FX-8350 setup. It's not as fast, but it is reliable and stable. I stand behind Gigabyte boards, as they have been rock solid for me on all my builds and all my clients builds.
This was the first time I left them for the MSI board, and I'll admit, it was the pretty LED lighting addition that did me in.... that's what I get for abandoning my 'function over fashion' moto. The board had great specs, but it just wasn't reliable. I have a theme going for the stduio though, and this added to it.
I have fallen behind on a lot of studio projects dealing with this issue on the MSI board and I am looking to purchase a new board for my intel 6800k cpu. I didn't spend over $600 on that chip to let it sit in it's box. I went out and purchased a Corsair 760T case with the transparent door for the MSI's LED features, so I am looking to utlize the LED with some reliability.
I just discovered the Gigabyte GA-X99 Ultra Gaming board:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813128928
To make sure I don't fall further behind on my projects. I want to get this board along with a separate SSD drive to put together on the bench and test it out before I pull apart my current case and switch everything out. I want to make sure it runs solid and is ready to go so I can just jump back into my projects when i do swap it out without worrying about crashes and what not. I planned on stress testing the CPU in it and everything.
Can I run this board outside a case for a while to test it out and make sure it will be stable? And if so, what do you guys suggest as far as what kind of surface to set it on? What do you recommend I do for this?
Thanks in advance.