and contrary to popular "belief" the amount of RGB lighting is not important!
and contrary to popular "belief" the amount of RGB lighting is not important!
have you ordered this yet? With all the hoo-har atm about bios chip size it might be worth pinging an email to Gigabyte and checking what size the mobo BIOS chip is, and whether it will support future Ryzen 3 and 4 processors before you pass the point of no-return.
Well... I actually ordered and paid for the mobo this morning. I'm not too worried, though, this build will last me at least the next five years and the mobo is certainly fit for that by all accounts.
It was a bit of a pain to get hold of, given short supply for obvious reasons. I've used a mixture of Amazon Business and OverclockersUK. I was going to do it all with Scan, but an application for a non-credit business account was refused by a very friendly guy on the basis that I couldn't commit to spending at least £1,500 per month. He said his retail colleague would call me to take my order.
Long story short, I wasn't called, I received a standard email, which I responded to by submitting my component list. Instead of getting back a quote for supply, I received a quote for a '3XS Custom AM4' PC build. I didn't want that and so emailed to change it. Nine emails and three telephone calls from me were ignored, so I took my business elsewhere. Their loss of a couple of grand's worth of business.
!WOW! that is not ideal. Sorry to hear that.
Re the board I'd be surprised if the bios chip is an issue - it's X570 so all the noise is that it will get support.
Look forward to hearing how you get on. Take pics, many pics. We need to resurrect the "document my build" thread.
Yes, I did some research myself and was reassured that the X570 is not the centre of that particular storm.
Also, I have prepped for the build by downloading all the X570 bios updates (7 of), driver updates (8 of), manuals (4 of) and utilities (15 of). There were no chipset driver updates for the X570.
Am I correct to assume that I need to install each driver update in sequence of their release?
I'll appraise the utilities and only install if I feel they bring something useful.
Don't worry, I'll certainly do that - I agree, the "document my build" thread has suffered from neglect recently, so I'll try to make it all look good!
My final shopping list, amended a little due to stock shortages, ended up as:
Processor AMD Ryzen 9 3900X
Motherboard Gigabyte X570 Auros Master
Cooler be quiet! Dark Rock 4 Pro
RAM 16GB Corsair Vengance LXP Black - 2x8Gb
Storage Samsung 970Evo Plus 1TB M.2 SSD Storage Drive
GPU Power Cooler Radeon RX5700
Case be quiet! White Pure Base 500
PSU Kolink Enclave 700W 80 Plus Gold Modular
Monitor Asus VG278Q 27" 1920x1080 TN FreeSync/G-Sync 144Hz 1ms Widescreen
Keyboard Xtrfy XG1-R-LED-UK Mechanical Keyboard
Mouse Asus TUF M5 Optical Mouse
Data sticks 2 x Kingston 64Gb Data Traveller
Thermal Paste Thermal Grizzly Kryonaut Thermal Paste 5.5g
Given the very useful advice given here, I scaled back the storage. I'll take the SSD drive and the two WD HDDs from my older i7 4790 rig back at home in France when I can return there and install them in this to augment what's here.
One of the two data sticks is to hold the Windows files for install and the other a Linux distro (haven't decided which one yet - Manjaro, MXLinux, Linux Mint and Fedora are all interesting!), as I want to set up the rig to dual boot.
Finally, the thermal paste is because I picked up on a Reddit thread that the heatsinks on the mobo get significantly better thermal conduction if paste is used to bed them.
Certainly not going to be bored!!
All the patches are standalone. You just need to run the latest one (in theory). Sometimes rolling back to an earlier version can solve a problem but I wouldn't bother unless you get s particular issue. The stability of the more recent bios for my board is far better than the original July 2019 version it shipped with.
You can check amd site for latest chipset driver if gigabyte don't supply them directly though I'd start with the latest one from gigabyte's site.
Imo the best way to dual boot without hassle is to have two separate SSD one for each os. Set the bios order so your main one is the first option. Then have it on a hot swap dock and simply activate/deactivate drives before turning the machine so the machine only sees the drive you want to load.
Helios451 (14-05-2020)
Interesting choice of PSU - what made you go for that particular one? I can't say I'm familiar with Kolink.
On the subject of the motherboard heatsinks, are you referring to the VRM heatsinks or those of the chipset? From the reviews I've seen of the X570 Master, the VRMs are such a high specification, it's very unlikely that they will get so hot that changing their thermal pads for thermal paste will be necessary. It also might void the warranty on the board too...
Helios451 (14-05-2020)
All the Gigabyte X570 motherboards have smaller 16MB BIOS chips AFAIK,so hopefully AMD won't pull some excuse next year!
I noted their wide range of cases , PSUs and case additions on the OverclockersUK site - they're a Hungarian firm that's been in this business since 2002 and sell across Europe. The PSU is the right spec and competitively priced, so I thought I'd give it a try.
It was specifically the chipset - I'm aware the VRM set up is really solid. I want to minimise the operation of the chipset fan, which is under the heatsink, and also the GPU body sits over the heatsink, so I want to maximise passive cooling all around that area. Yes, I do realise the implications for board warranty!
Helios451 (14-05-2020)
Incidentally, guys, do we have a 'Build Diary' thread anywhere within the fora? All I am aware of is the Chassis and Mods sub-thread.
Can I suggest that a Build Diary sub-thread is created - if a Moderator is listening...?
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