Archive for Hardware

The Q6600 and Me

// June 30th, 2008 // No Comments » // Hardware, Tech

Well, I’ve had a couple days with my new system, and as promised, I’ll share my impressions.  Overall, I think it is going well, and I’m pretty pleased with what I got.  I haven’t ran into anything bad, but I’m pretty sure the machine is sneaking into my bedroom at night to watch me sleep.  But that could be my imagination.

PICT0326Anyway, assembly was nothing.  Par for the course.  Heck, ripping everything out of the case was probably harder than putting it back.  Plus there was the whole air compressor + dusty innards = sneezy me.  The only thing I discovered was that my PSU didn’t have a 6 pin graphics card power plug, and I thought it did.  Luckily, the card itself came with an adapter.  For those of you not up with the times (kinda like me), the LGA 775 socket uses a new retention mechanism: a plate that flips down over the CPU to press it onto the contact points.  Remember, these processors no longer have pins like the old days.  But it is sorta neat, and it makes a kind of crunchy noise when it locks down.  At first, this scared me, till I realized it was just the socket’s pins compressing down as the CPU locked in.  The thumbscrews you see around the socket go to my behemoth of a heatsink, the Tuniq Tower 120.  I had to order a new backplate because I lost the original (socket 754 boards didn’t need it), but it fit well as you can see, and the screws were tossed on so I wouldn’t lose them.

I’m pretty impressed the the setup of the board cooling too.  The P35 northbridge chip while solid, is not high performance, so it doesn’t get real crazy hot, and there’s no need for active cooling on it.  But what they did was set up a series of three copper heatsinks joined by heatpipes.  So, this makes for decent cooling, with no extra fan noise.  And it looks pretty.

PICT0327The Tuniq Tower is where it’s at.  I got this as a review sample some years ago when they were brand new, and I must say, it is withstanding the test of time.  It’s still one of the top rated heatsinks you can get at Newegg, and fits pretty much any CPU on the market.  The catch is, it’s HUGE.  I’ve told people about this, and they just don’t grasp how truly tall this thing is.  Don’t get one if you have a tiny case.  The picture at the left should give you some idea how big it is.  Height on it is over 6″.  But let me tell you, it does a heck of a job.  I have noticed that even under load, I haven’t had a need to turn up the fan speed above the lowest setting.  Eventually I’ll start overclocking the CPU to see just how much I can juice it for with this.  My old AMD rig needed to be running with full fan speed full time, and it didn’t have much headroom for any overclocking.

Okay, cutting to the chase, I dropped in the RAM, got it set up in dual-channel mode, popped the motherboard tray back into the case, and dropped in the video card and other misc cards.  Again, I had no complications, and everything seemed to play nicely.  I’d read of some problems with the Neo2 having its SATA ports blocked by long video cards, but I didn’t experience this with the Zotac 8800GT I put it.  This might be because it is a single slot design, whereas a lot of cards take up two slots of space with large coolers attached.

PICT0329Here’s everything dropped in.  You can see the footprint of the Tuniq Tower here, and while you can’t so much see it, it comes nearly right up to the side panel because of its height.  Cabling is a mess with this PSU though, because it isn’t modular, and they were generous on lengths.  Plugged in and turned on, between the video card and the motherboard, it’s quite the light show.

Now, this is where my first scare came.  Apparently the Neo2 does a funny thing where it power cycles when it detects BIOS setting changes for hardware.  So if you change the bus ratio, like I had to to set my RAM to 1066MHz, when you restart, it will power cycle a couple times, before actually booting.  This scared the bejesus out of me the first time, as I thought something was wrong.  There’s not, that’s just how it works.  Once your settings are done and final, when you start up, it’s normal as anything.

So far I’m just running Windows XP.  A storm killed the power halfway through installing Ubuntu on my second partition, and I haven’t gotten back to it yet (and man how I want to play with Compiz with some proper graphics).  Boot up times aren’t really anything to write home about.  And in all honesty, day to day activities aren’t really dramatically different.  I expected it to be a little snappier opening up applications and such, but so far I haven’t felt that.

This slight disappointment is totally offset by the performance.  I have been taking some TV shows and converting them to DVDs lately.  Previously, a 30 minute episode took about 30 minutes or so to encode and it pretty well pulled the machine down to do it.  That normally meant queuing up a bunch of episodes and letting them encode overnight.  Now… damn.  Four and a half minutes, tops.  Some faster than that.  The encoding speed is staggering.  This is a huge boost to me, as I don’t have to plan any more overnight encoding sessions.  Games so far are rocking too.  FarCry runs fully cranked up, native resolution, with full anti-aliasing and anisotropic filtering without missing a beat.  3DMark06 gave me better than 12,000 points.  I plan on trying out some more robust games soon to see how it holds up against something a bit newer (plus Spore comes out in September!).

Now I’m looking forward to pushing things a bit harder, trying some newer games, and getting Ubuntu running on the machine.  So far, so good, and I’d say it was money well spent.  The parts like each other, and the results thus far seem to agree.

Out For Delivery (sorry AMD)

// June 29th, 2008 // No Comments » // Hardware, Tech

Okay, so I managed to find an economically stimulating purpose for my economy stimulus check, even though I promised myself it was going into savings.  I’ve been orbiting the idea of getting a new computer for some time now, but kept pushing it back.  Prices finally came down to a point where now I don’t feel too guilty about getting some new gear in, and bringing myself back up to par.  Plus, I can’t let Steve have a better machine than me, I just can’t.

There was a time when my socket 754 AMD 64 3200+ processor and ATI 9800 Pro All-In-Wonder were top notch.  Naturally this was about five years ago when I still wrote hardware reviews for ThinkComputers.org, and I was able to take advantage of AMD’s Marketbuilder program to score a ridiculously fantastic price on the hardware.  Back then, it was still somewhat easy to pick out what you wanted.  There was variety, but it wasn’t to the point of confusion.  For instance, if you wanted an AMD processor, you went with the then being phased out Socket A, or the new Socket 754.  If you wanted a video card, a 9800 Pro was a sure bet, and the 9800 only had a few basic variations: the SE, the 9800, the Pro, and the All-In-Wonder.  Pretty simple.

These days…man…I’m not sure what’s happened, but it took me a couple solid months of research and scrounging through Tom’s Hardware’s performance charts to figure out what I even wanted.  I can’t even try to keep up with motherboard chipsets anymore, and the variations on video card GPU’s is staggering.  So, I thought I’d go in to what I got and why (so I hope you’re happy now @abosio), in case you need some help coming up with a plan to cut through the crap.

PICT0325First off, I am making use of some current hardware.  My 520W Raidmax Titanium power supply is up to snuff, so it stays.  My hard drives are ample, so they stay.  My DVD-ROM is forever reliable, so it stays.  After four years, my Tuniq Tower 120 is still one of the top rated heatsink/fans on the market, so it stays.  And lastly, I think I’m going to let my Sound Blaster Audigy Platinum hang around.  This last one was stretching it, as I think onboard sound processors these days are plenty good for my needs, but I don’t know what else to do with the card, and I love the 3.5″ bay input box that comes with it.  I also think it was a much more reliable card than anything Creative has put out in recent years.  So, all these parts save me a few dollars.

What I ordered: Intel Q6600 Core 2 Quad CPU, 2GB of Kingston HyperX DDR2 1066 RAM, an MSI Neo2-FR motherboard, and the Zotac 8800GT overclocked video card.  Total cost: $551.60 shipped.

CPU
I almost felt dirty jumping the AMD ship.  I have normally been fiercely loyal to the AMD brand, and nearly stayed that way.  I looked closely at the 6000+, and for $74 after a $45 off coupon code, it’s dollar per performance beat the hell out of the Q6600.  It fell behind it only marginally on the charts, and normally I’m okay with that.  What I wasn’t okay with was that it is a 125 watt cpu, which is beaten by Intel’s 95 watts.  AMD has also started suffering from socket confusion, as they had been using the AM2, which has evolved to the AM2+, but will yield very soon to the AM3.  This is what happened with the Socket 754/939/940 mess, and was exactly why I got stuck with a socket 754 chip now, that leaves me essentially no upgrade path short of a rebuild.  On the other hand, Intel has proven that its LGA 775 socket is ridiculously reliable, and while the replacement (Socket H/LGA 715) is on the map, it’s not coming any time terribly soon.  So, while the Q6600 was quite a spot more on the cost side, I feel like I’m future proofing myself better (not to mention getting 4 cores, instead of 2, which isn’t a big deal now, but should help me scale in the future).

Video Card
While I was always loyal to the AMD brand, I’ve never had such loyalties regarding video cards.  In fact, I’ve flip-flopped several times.  My first, and possibly best card ever was a VooDoo3 3500TV.  From there I went to a GeForce3 Ti200, and then to my ATI 9800 Pro.  And I’ve been very happy with them all.  So this time around, cost was the main factor.  I had never heard of this brand, Zotac, but the card on Newegg was getting great scores and praise, with 5 stars after 120 ratings (and a 93% pure 5 star rating).  The card retailed at $199, Newegg had it for $169, and there’s a $30 mail in rebate (assuming it goes through).  So, basically you are getting one of the most solid mainstream cards for about 40% less than competitors.  Granted, the ATI 4850 looks poised to take the crown away from the 8800GT thanks to it’s price:performance ratio, but I can live with that for now, because you can’t get a 4850 for $139.  Yet.

RAM
I went with the cheapest RAM I could get that wasn’t junk value RAM, and matched the max supported by my motherboard, which was 1066MHz.  Kingston HyperX is solid, with good ratings, and a lifetime warrantee.  I’ve also used Kingston in years gone past, and had good experiences with it.  Enough said.  If you buy RAM with heatpipes on them and huge heatsinks because you think it will work better, you’re pretty much paying a really high idiot tax.  RAM doesn’t need heatpipes.  I’m looking at you OCZ.  In fact, if your RAM gets hot enough that it DOES need them, I’d say you’re doing something pretty damn wrong.

Motherboard
Another big headache here.  The number of chipset offerings alone can make your head hurt.  Plus do you go with SLI/Crossfire options, or run with a single video card?  My idea was to get an option for SLI, and use it as a graphics upgrade path in the future.  When I started trailing, I’d buy another 8800GT and drop it in.  This is a stupid idea.  If you don’t buy two cards together, don’t use it as an upgrade path.  One, you’ll be lucky to find a matching card by then, and two, a single card upgrade is going to do as much for you as two aging cards.  Plus Crossfire boards were cheaper than SLI boards by a good measure, and I wasn’t buying an ATI card and didn’t want to shell out what they were asking for SLI.  So price and logic led me to the P35 chipset, which isn’t bad, provides solid performance, and isn’t a bargain basement chipset (though it’s not high end, by any means).  The MSI Neo2 was one of the better scoring boards at a price I could easily stomach, and it had all the USB/SATA ports that I was looking for.  It also looks like it takes cooling on the chipsets and mosfets seriously.

And there you have it.  My reasoning behind my four main components isn’t terribly involved, and I tried to just go with what was most logical (like deciding between single or dual card graphics).  I’ll follow up soon with my impressions post-rebuild, as well as a couple pictures of what things look like assembled.  I’m actually finishing this blog out having completed assembly, and let my tell you that so far things are favorable.

Who’s yo daddy?

// April 19th, 2006 // No Comments » // Hardware, Software, Tech

***NOTE: The following blog contains language that might be found to be geeky and uninteresting to most normal people. Tough.***

You know what, sometimes I just thing I need to stop. “Mr. Fienen, put down the CD-R and step away from the computer!” But seriously. For the second time in as many months, I nearly scrapped my main drive on my desktop. For once though, I came out on top.

Back story. You might recall my mentioning killing it a while back. Well, that was not my fault actually, just the inevitable death of an old drive. So I replaced it with a new 160Gb drive. Partitioned it and set up to dual boot Windows and Linux using GRUB. Well, the other night I needed some extra space for some video I was editting together. I haven’t used Linux in a while, mostly because I wanted to play with a new distro, so I formatted the partition for NTFS and used it to drop some video on.

Then I realized the error in my ways. Rebooting gave me a nifty “error 22″ from GRUB when the computer came on. Why? Because the partition the boot record was stored on was gone. Deleted by yours friggin’ truly. Well damn… What to do, right? I tried using my install CD to get to the recovery console and fix stuff, but the Administrator password I have used for ages “mysteriously” no longer worked. I was able to use a basic boot CD to force it to just ram the first part of the drive through and into Windows. It worked okay, so I went with it. I used the opportunity to pull up what is now my new best friend. UBCD4Win. I found this by accident. It’s sorta a pain to build the first time around (it’s not just a ready to go ISO, although the v3.0 promises to change that. It’s now on RC5, so I’m thinking new version very soon).

So from there I rebooted with a copy of UBCD4Win. This thing is slick. Sorta like a Windows Live CD, though not really. It’s just Windowsesque. But it comes packed with tools. And since it runs from the CD, you can work on things like hard drives without problem. Unless you’re me and manage to just flat out erase the MBR. Why did I do this? The short answer is tool misuse. I went in the wrong order with a partition tool I was unfamiliar with and just brought the whole partition table crashing down around me. Fantastic. Restarting the comp assured me it had no clue what it was doing with that drive now. Boot media? What boot media?

But, being the useful CD it is, I was able go back in with it to scan the drive, and it saw there were clearly two partitions, and it restored them. I set the first one as active, and rebooted. It tried so hard to start. It really did. But in the end it just sat there, cursor blinking, unsure what to do. But at least no error, and I had confirmed with UBCD4Win that the file structure was just fine and dandy. Reboot again. Among the tools on the CD is a Windows password reseter. I was able to change the Admin password that I apparently forgot somewhere along the road from there and boot with the normal XP install CD then, login to the recovery console fine, and run fixmbr. And POOF! I have a repaired computer finally.

As far as I an concerned, UBCD4Win is now a permanent addition to my toolbox, that thing is super neato. Granted if I would not be dumb to begin with…