hey peeps.
Question: Can I tell a Zotac to make due with 400W, or will I fry it?
Story behind this question: I have this old HP Z220 Workstation that I use for doodling around, and it came with a 400W PSU and a gtx660. Recently I ran a game called Ghost Recon Wildlands and its lowest recommended spec was a gtx 660, but I ended up managing to fry the card with it after 3 hours of playing (its definitely buggered, white lines across the screen). I do have a better gaming PC but I just wanted to have this HP for trying other stuff out.
Now I have this nifty old Zotac GTX780Ti 3Gb lying around and from what I read the minimum power specs running this boy is 550W. Do you guys know if there's a way to plug this thing into the HP and tell it not to demand so much power, or will I just fry it too?
As far as I can tell, bigger cap PSUs for these HP workstations aren't readily available, and its got some kind of unique motherboard plug or something. So I don't think upgrading the HP's power unit is an option... unless you guys know more?
Would love to know what you guys think!
Cheers!
Question: Can I tell a Zotac to make due with 400W, or will I fry it?
Story behind this question: I have this old HP Z220 Workstation that I use for doodling around, and it came with a 400W PSU and a gtx660. Recently I ran a game called Ghost Recon Wildlands and its lowest recommended spec was a gtx 660, but I ended up managing to fry the card with it after 3 hours of playing (its definitely buggered, white lines across the screen). I do have a better gaming PC but I just wanted to have this HP for trying other stuff out.
Now I have this nifty old Zotac GTX780Ti 3Gb lying around and from what I read the minimum power specs running this boy is 550W. Do you guys know if there's a way to plug this thing into the HP and tell it not to demand so much power, or will I just fry it too?
As far as I can tell, bigger cap PSUs for these HP workstations aren't readily available, and its got some kind of unique motherboard plug or something. So I don't think upgrading the HP's power unit is an option... unless you guys know more?
Would love to know what you guys think!
Cheers!