Would just stick with that XFX if so, it's not that bad and should have enough power for the parts used. Just save up some money for something better if you are going to upgrade.He has a
Integra M 550W
Well you could say "I took the risk". I launched warzone and it was running very well. My pc was loud as hell but I doubt that was due to the PSU. Now I do not if there is any long term damage that could be made but for now i didnt experience any problems running the game. I do however plan on buying a new PSU but not atm. Now either I will buy a brand new thermaltake rgb 600w PSU or I will buy a used 550W PSU from my friend since he is getting a upgrade.
Would just stick with that XFX if so, it's not that bad and should have enough power for the parts used. Just save up some money for something better if you are going to upgrade.He has a
Integra M 550W
He has a
Integra M 550W
Why should he get a new PSU though? He has a strong enough PSU for his specs.Then the first thing on both you AND your friend's list of things to do for your PCs is to get a better PSU.
See the first link in my sig - that should be your must-read for PSU selection.
Why should he get a new PSU though? He has a strong enough PSU for his specs.
Why do you consider the XFX as that bad?You seem to have a continual fixation on wattage number, when the larger question is quality. This is the equivalent of buying a house solely on square footage.
When someone eats a pound of bacon for breakfast every morning, the damage to their heart happens long before they drop dead.
I was running warzone and streaming with R7 3700x and 2060 Super on a 370W PSU. It died after a few hours of doing it though and had to buy a new one.So I have a RTX 2060 and a i7 9700 but i have a 450W power supply. I was wondering if i launch a intensive game like CoD: Warzone what will happen if my gpu and cpu overpower my PSU and is 450W even enough?