I've been having a mix of minor issues with this build, so the quick run down is that I replaced most of my old build back in fall of 2019. Everything except the psu and hhd are old from the previous build.
OS: Windows 10 home 64bit
CPU: Intel core i7 7700 @ 3.60GHz (kaby lake)
Ram: 8x2 (16gb) G.SKILL TridentZ RGB Series
Mobo: MSI MPG Z390 GAMING PLUS LGA 1151
Gpu: RTX 2070 SUPER
Monitor: 1920x1080@75Hz
Storage: 500gb samsung ssd (new/os install some games) 2TB seagate hdd (roughly 8-9 years+ )
Psu: EVGA SuperNOVA 850 G2 220-G2-0850-XR 80+ GOLD (roughly a little over 2 years old, 3 years in oct 2020 )
So the problem I'm facing and I've noticed it since I put everything together a few months back, but I haven't been able to really pin point what the cause is. Hence why I'm at a loss with figuring it out on my own at this point. I believe it's the gpu that every so often while playing select games, I'll hear this stuttering "Brr" stop, "Brr" repeating for some time and then it'll go away after sometimes 4-5 seconds and other times it's around for 30+ seconds, etc. My first thought was maybe the gpu fans were hitting something when temps would reach 50c and the fans would begin to spin up. (this doesn't seem to be the case)
It's hard to tell exactly the pin point location of the noise when listening with the case open even. I'd like to think it's the gpu is the source, but it does sound like it's possible the psu on a slim chance could be the actual source? (The only difference is with this build, the case I have has a intake on the bottom of the case. So the psu fan in laying flat for that intake/opening, otherwise facing the fan intake up there's the metal in-house casing that hides the busy work of cables, psu, storage bays, etc.)
I was able to record and capture the sound, I try to move my phone from the gpu area to the psu area behind the case to see if there's a difference in sound. But it's hard to tell with the sound bouncing off the wall that's 4-5 inches from the back of the case. Even turning my case away, it's still kind of a pain to pin point.
(video clip of the noise in question.)
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EC3wYFKOVKQ
OS: Windows 10 home 64bit
CPU: Intel core i7 7700 @ 3.60GHz (kaby lake)
Ram: 8x2 (16gb) G.SKILL TridentZ RGB Series
Mobo: MSI MPG Z390 GAMING PLUS LGA 1151
Gpu: RTX 2070 SUPER
Monitor: 1920x1080@75Hz
Storage: 500gb samsung ssd (new/os install some games) 2TB seagate hdd (roughly 8-9 years+ )
Psu: EVGA SuperNOVA 850 G2 220-G2-0850-XR 80+ GOLD (roughly a little over 2 years old, 3 years in oct 2020 )
So the problem I'm facing and I've noticed it since I put everything together a few months back, but I haven't been able to really pin point what the cause is. Hence why I'm at a loss with figuring it out on my own at this point. I believe it's the gpu that every so often while playing select games, I'll hear this stuttering "Brr" stop, "Brr" repeating for some time and then it'll go away after sometimes 4-5 seconds and other times it's around for 30+ seconds, etc. My first thought was maybe the gpu fans were hitting something when temps would reach 50c and the fans would begin to spin up. (this doesn't seem to be the case)
It's hard to tell exactly the pin point location of the noise when listening with the case open even. I'd like to think it's the gpu is the source, but it does sound like it's possible the psu on a slim chance could be the actual source? (The only difference is with this build, the case I have has a intake on the bottom of the case. So the psu fan in laying flat for that intake/opening, otherwise facing the fan intake up there's the metal in-house casing that hides the busy work of cables, psu, storage bays, etc.)
I was able to record and capture the sound, I try to move my phone from the gpu area to the psu area behind the case to see if there's a difference in sound. But it's hard to tell with the sound bouncing off the wall that's 4-5 inches from the back of the case. Even turning my case away, it's still kind of a pain to pin point.
(video clip of the noise in question.)