• Warbirds Library V4 (Resources for now) How to


    We just posted part one of the how to on uploading new files to the Library. Part 1 covers adding new files. Part 2 will cover making changes to your the uploads you own.


    Questions or comments please post them in the regular forums. Which forum is that... Well it is the one you spend the most time in.

    Thanks the Staff

    Library How to

LOOKING TO BUILD A NEW PC FOR FSX THEN LOOK HERE!

It seems to be really hard to track down an LGA1155 board at the moment and I like the idea that I can go to a 990X just by changing the chip.

One tip that I could use is with regard to the thermal paste. I've ordered arctic silver, but do you have any tips for applying it to the CPU so I don't kill the damn thing!
 
It seems to be really hard to track down an LGA1155 board at the moment and I like the idea that I can go to a 990X just by changing the chip.

One tip that I could use is with regard to the thermal paste. I've ordered arctic silver, but do you have any tips for applying it to the CPU so I don't kill the damn thing!

It really depends on the type of CPU/FAN heatsink you buy...for instance:


[Step #1 - Thermal paste application on 3rd party H.D.T Direct-touch Heatsink]
* if your heatsink is the standard flat base-plate model, then skip this Step and proceed to Step 2.

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This image has been resized. Click this bar to view the full image. The original image is sized 600x488.
hsfvf4.jpg


Directions:-
1. Shown above is an example of the base of a standard 3-heatpipe H.D.T design Heatsink (Xigmatek 1283). (yours might have 4 exposed pipes, etc..)
2. Apply thermal paste by gently injecting the syringe along the grooves in between the copper and aluminium parts. (not the 4 yellow dots but the 4 strips of grooves in between the exposed copper!)
3. Use a flexible card (name card, playing cards, etc) to spread of the paste evenly and ensure the grooves in between are filled properly.
4. Clean off the excess paste on the exposed copper areas and it should resemble the picture above.
5. I would personally put 4 THIN-LAYERED drops at the yellow spots as shown above, to ensure corner coverage after the heatsink is mounted.

This is only one method. Some 3rd party fan/heatsinks for the core i7 already have Arctic Silver or the new Ceramique paste so let me know which fan/heatsink you buy.
Ted
 
Yours is a flat surface type of head. Zalman is one of the best coolers and makes a very good paste I would go with what is on it...although some of the newer ones do not have it applied. If that is the case a single stripe of paste deadcenter is adequate. They supply your paste last time I looked. AS5 or Ceramique either is really good. Some engineers here at TechCorp prefer ceramique for heat dissipation.

http://www.arcticsilver.com/ceramique.htm

This tells you how to apply AS5 or Ceramique and is correct!
http://www.arcticsilver.com/intel_application_method.html

Ted
 
Thanks for your help, everything arrived and got built up last night and today it even booted (well after I put the memory in the right slots!)

Just trying to get W7 to like it's new home as I brought my HDD's over from my old machine in the hope that it would just pick up the new hardware, but that might have been optimistic.

Hopefully get a chance to try FSX tomorrow.
 
Wow Andy I would start out with a new fast hard drive for Win7...my opinion! Glad ya got her workin'!!! WOOOHOOOO!
Ted
 
I think the problem is the bios is seeing the drives in a different order than when they were in the old machine so Windows is confused. Reinstalling W7 is no biggy though.

Minor heart attack when it wouldn't post until I figured out the memory was in the wrong slots!

Everything seems to be working though and I have stable temps of 32.5c on the CPU acording to BIOS.

New HDD's are in the plan, but just not quite yet. The old one's will have to soldier on for a few months.
 
New HDD's are in the plan, but just not quite yet. The old one's will have to soldier on for a few months.

Hi Andy

Your spec looks great! Good luck with it.

Re the HDD's - on my old pc I became very fed up with the long loading times. Even when I wanted to change aircraft in sim, it seemed to take ages. So, for my new pc I went for SSDs. Originally I was going for one biggish one, but after looking at the prices I went for two - a 64GB and a 128GB. I loaded W7 onto the 64GB and FSX (only) onto the 128GB. BTW, my current FSX install is a bit over 80GB. I also have two normal 7,200 1TB HDs for everything else.

Anyway, to the point of my post - the SSDs are amazing! No other word for it. Everything is just so fast now to load. It probably even helps a little with the frame rate as any new scenery that I fly over (I use OrbX/FTX a lot) will load much faster.

These are the ones that I bought -
http://www.novatech.co.uk/novatech/prods/components/harddrives-ssd/crucial/ctfddac064mag-1g1.html

http://www.novatech.co.uk/novatech/prods/components/harddrives-ssd/crucial/ctfddac128mag-1g1.html

I have had them for about a month now, and they are great.

I thought that it might be of interest to you.

Cheers

Paul
 
Thanks, I'm looking at getting a PCI-E SSD at some point as there are some reasonable size drives now in the $400-500 range, I purposely got a MB with enough space for that. I also have two free SATA III ports which I also think might find an SSD attached to them at some stage.

I had to keep this build within somewhat sensible limits hence sticking with the old drives, but as soon as I can get away with it I'll put something better in there - at least a RAID 0 array if not SSD's.

My first quick test flight over London with all the sliders to the right got me 50fps steady, so I'm looking forward to trying Aerosoft London and PNW. Aerosoft London was always a bigger killer for me than Manhatten X, so I'm interested to see how that performs.

Definitely no regrets so far.
 
1000 to 1200 watts is probably a good idea if you go with 570 or 580GTX. I talked to James and he told me I could come in on Wed and setup a full system to include different power supplies to see what works. I'll let you know. Kilo Delta mention the AMD (ATI) Infinity the only problem I have the AMD video cards is that the cockpit lines around the radios and on all the FS9 portovers seem too jagged for my taste...but that is a personal thing. ATI 6870 is a real sweetheart of video card. I had tested three of them and liked them all...not overly impressed with the 6970s yet.
Ted

Hey Ted, were you ever able to test out the Gigabyte 5770? I am pretty much sold on it for my needs but would be interested to see any comments you might have. I came across a deal for a 5770 for $150.00 Cdn and the 5750 for $160.00 why the new better card is less I am not sure? I am going t go look at it tomorrow to confirm my plans will work but I think it is what I want.

I also confirmed I have an 800 Watt PSU so this is a better option for now, it will support 3 monitors on one card and the total draw is only 45 watts so Ithink I am ok n power for the time being.
 
yes I did and the test were not as good as I hoped for FSX...I guess it is because of the small interface on the HD5770. It scored good but only as a lightweight card in Far CRhY2 and BIOSHOCK, If you just want cheap and yet some power the card is OK, but better to move up to either a 192bit Nivida GTX460 for around the same price. Of course for FSX a 256bit or higher is better! Be sure and get at least 1GB of VRAM
 
Thanks Ted, I am replacing a GTX9600 which has been fine so as long as this equal to or better than that I am fine with it. I am not into Farcry or Bioshock so that does not concern me. My mian goal was to find something that would support at least 3 monitors and hopefully wul run on my current PSU and I think this one will do that. I looked at the 460, but the price around here is just over $220.00 per and I would need a pair plus a new PSU so that is getting up there.

Thanks ver much for your response, and knowledge, much appreciated.
 
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