Building my New 2400€ Editing PC
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- Опубліковано 23 лип 2024
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After four years of use it was time to upgrade my editing PC that I edit all my videos with. I spent a little bit more this time, so it will hopefully last longer than four years!
The specs:
CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 3950x
Mainboard: MSI MPG X570 Gaming pro carbon
RAM: 64 GB DDR4 3200 MHz
Cooler: NZXT Kraken X72 360mm
GPU: MSI GeForce RTX 2060 Super
PSU: 600w be quiet! Pure Power 11 80+Gold
Case: be quiet! Pure Base 600
drives:
- 512GB Samsung 970 Pro M.2
- 1000GB Samsung 970 Evo M.2 (editing drive)
from old PC:
- 500GB Crucial SSD
- 8 TB HDD Archive drive
- 2 TB HDD
Enjoy the video! - Навчання та стиль
My bigger project that I'm working on at the moment (see my Instagram feed) still takes some time. So I have this none project video instead.
Great content 🌹👌👍👍💯
Very impressive, I might even try a build myself instead of buying a premade PC. Will it workout cheaper after purchasing Windows software ete ... ?
Definitely yes.
Just so you know the mpg x570 carbon pro does run your vrms hotter than normal and i think it has other problems that is why they made the msi meg x570 unify it fixes all of those problems
Hey Marius, Big fan of your work, would you mind doing a chess board with pieces, but at least double the size of normal chess board
Marius Hornberger Tech Tips.
Now that's a pretty advanced monitor, even communicates with you. Nice build
Great job Marius. Another awesome video. I've always enjoyed working on my PC's. Fun to see what you chose and the reasoning behind it.
I find most of the lighting on PC components to be something I want to avoid. I personally find them annoying.
If they all light up in different colors, i agree, but configured right they look sick as hell !!!
@@jonasedvstuff3369 Yeah, if you want your room to be lit by blue light..... yuck.
Good job! Enjoyed it.
Congratulations on the new PC. Speed makes all the difference. Thanks for sharing your build experiences.
congratulations on the new computer!
Really like the case. Enjoyed the video. Thanks for sharing your thoughts and talents.
Very nice system. I'm sure that you're going to get a lot of use out of it. I didn't understand half of what you said but as long as you are happy with it that is all that really matters. I'm not a very tech savvy person but the stuff that I did understand was very impressive.
Keep the great videos coming.
Thanks for sharing and God bless
Looks like you're going to have a really nice computer! And you should. You do great work that the rest of us get to enjoy.
I think the way you did things is more than good enough for this to be a tutorial on how to build a pc
And he doesn't even work on a high tech e-magazine like the Verge!
Great video. I bet it's made video editing so much more enjoyable 👍🏻😜
Marius, We can’t tell from this side how frustrating it was to edit all the videos you have done over the years. I’m glad you put a system together to help make it a more pleasant editing experience!!
I like this project a lot!
Nice work!
When I started messing with computers I had to set the interrupt and memory allocation with jumpers. Setting up computers now a days is super easy compared to the antique stuff I started out on.
Can't tell you the number of times that I received calls "my computer won't power on" and it was the on/off optional switch on the power supply.
Happy new computer tower! I'm not an IT wiz, but I do know that struggling with an inferior computer can be frustrating.
Nice PC build, Marius.
I thought you were going to make the PC case on your cnc out of wood or make a desk pc case.... oh well maybe another time
Greg El that would be really cool
Channel "DIY Perks" made wooden one - it turned out to be pretty loud.
@@coldobina I was thinking more something like the bloodlines mod bit-tech.net did: ua-cam.com/video/KBi5UDhpVng/v-deo.html. Also looking at the clearence issues he had screwing things in (4 attempts to put the motherboard in), I think that some modding on this case, for example replacing some panels with wooden cnc carved ones with better clearences and more space would be also practical, not just fancy modding for looks.
@@coldobina So did John Heisz
I haven't built a PC in a couple of years. I didn't know Bluetooth is now available on the mobo. Great video and project. Thanks for sharing.
Great Value components you picked right there :)
Only component i disagree on is the cooler. Watercooling doesn't make sense financially, a high quality aircooler like the Be Quiet Dark Rock 4 would have done the job just fine (200W cooler for a 105W CPU) while being much cheaper. Still nice build, hope you enjoy it! :)
Financial cost is but a single consideration. It isn't always the deciding factor.
Agreed, it just adds another failure point, with no real benefit. Ryzen chips don't run hot, and won't self overclock much more than 50MHz over a good tower cooler.
Yeah. High-end air coolers can easily cool that CPU. Gamers nexus did a stress test of the 3950X with a Noctua NH-D15 on it kept it at 58c over ambient(delta T). That is still way under the spec for the CPU. But at least he got a good AIO. Some of them have horrible fans
@@watcherofwatchers in this case it was though, he mentioned that more then once.
Impressive! Congratulations. 😃
Nice build :)
In your q&a-Video from a couple of years ago, you said there was a story to how you got into woodworking. I’d be very interested to hear that story :)
That would probably be the perfect setup for me because I don't play games either I just edit videos. Very nice job.
I upgraded my editing PC last fall with i9/32GB/1TB SSD and the first thing I did after instaling everything was disabling ALL those god damn RGB leds.
My favorite woodworker building a computer. This is the best crossover I could have imagined 🤩
When it come to PC and Hight preference I start be jealous a little bit lol
Thanks for sharing
Keep up the good work
Thas some real fancy wood computer....wait ooooo
Great video as usual! Did you enable XMP in the BIOS to get the RAM to work at its rated speed?
Hi Marius, thanks for the insides -- where Did you buy your components here in Germany?
Hey Marius, thanks for all the great videos.
Do you ever worry about dust accumulation in the case? It's on the floor and full off holes, won't that eventually cause problems?
Hopefully you followed The Verge* computer building tutorial! loool 😁
wasn't it the Verge?
@@no-eb2xx Yup it was the Verge.
@@no-eb2xx Whoops, when sleep deprivation strikes!
That's a beast, man. Wish I had the money for that
but RGB make your PC 50% faster at least 😋
Only the R does
G makes it eco friendly
The B makes it run 30% cooler
RGB have the same effect as those big TURBO decals had on the performance of 80's cars!
Just tight enough to slightly compress the rubber. Finger tight then 1/4 turn give or take, no need to crank them down
Thanks for the info!
Rubber gaskets between the fans and the radiator are actually to improve the seal between the two. It means more of the airflow goes through the radiator rather than through the sides. Improves dynamic pressure.
are u using the big mic because on my audio system with a sub tdp of 220 W u sound verry tinny
a better build guide than The Verge hahah
enjoy the new computer, Marius :)
This could have been him sticking rocks into a potato and it would have been a better build video! LOL!
congratulations with your new pc,that’s a lot of money but its not expensive if it’s usable for what you do with it offcourse,now on to some great wood project so you can edit and show us that you are (still) a great woodworker ;-)
Ich liebe deinen kleinen Gag auf dem Monitor. Sehr kreativ...
The system parts were very well chosen, good job on that one! Only thing which would be a optical thing: the AIO should be turned 45° to the right (Logo isn't sitting right ;) ). Totally optional thou. Congrats to your new system, may it run for a long time without problems! :D
Something is wrong with this video. He's wearing a different shirt! Nevermind. 20 minutes in, he's back to his usual wardrobe.
Nice PC. One thing to notice: Mounting the rad 180 degree turned around make things easier.
hello Marius
i have the same tower and approximatively the same config.
the ryzen 9 3900x is bomb.
to edit 15 minutes (4GB) of video in 4k I need 9 minutes of rendering in Adobe Premiere.
Good video Marius. I have made quite a few PCs, and I think you did a wonderfull job. The only part choise I dod not like was the PSU size, allways get a PSU that is way bigger than you need. If your system draws a total maximum of 550w an 600w PSU will on the long run still be quite taxed and become way hotter than nessesary and it's life expectancy will shorten by a great deal. And as you say you want this machine to last a good long time, a bigger PSU would have lasted more uppgrades than the 600w. But then again it would costs more now, and you could easyli enough change it leighter if you need.
Good explanation, as always, on your videos. You showed wery good that you should not touch the cooling paste before instalation and you removed the antistatic bag from the moatherboard instead of placing it under (the bag works by containing the static on the outside. Plasing the exposed pind from your bord on top of it is not good so I am impressed.
Keep up the good work, love your build videos.
Exactly my thought with the Power supply 👍
Marius, I know you said that you will never upgrade so a 600W PSU will be enough. However, in my 25 years working in IT, I have tended to find that over time, power supplies give out less and less power as they get old (bad caps maybe?). I always opt for a much larger supply than necessary to avoid this issue.
If you EVER get weird problems with this machine, that PSU should be the first thing you look at. As the power drops, things can't get enough voltage/current and start acting oddly or hanging. When it does, think power supply!
Hope this helps. :)
i'm pretty sure even 600w is enough to give you like a 50-100w buffer, depending on how many hard drives and stuff you add, on top of made upgrading to a 2080ti
For cases, I can recommend Fractal Design. After building PC's for years, I default to them now as they are just such a pleasure to build in. Lots of stuff holds in place with magnets instead of screws, good access & management capabilities.
Normally you would just attach the radiator to the case in the last step so you wouldnt have any issues that way but it worked at he end anyways :)
That was a nice build, almost a guide, better than the verge. But you should make a stool for the pc, lifting it up from the floor.
little correction: the CPU does support much more than ddr4 3200
the useful maximum is at about 3733 because it is in sync with the infinity fabric clock in a 1:1 ratio
price wise the sweet spot currently lies at around ddr4 3600
ryzen 3000 heavily benefits from faster ram, so 3200 is the bare minimum you should choose
btw: if you choose a different case without drive bays for external optixal drives, you can mount the radiator in the front of the case which is much more convenient for accessing the fan connectors for cpu fans
a fractal design meshify c for example
Amen.
Sorry, should have said "amen but." Mounting your radiator on the front means washing your GPU with heat exhaust from your CPU. That's probably not a problem in his case since he won't be stress-testing his GPU, but something to keep in mind. I'd rather exhaust hot air into the environment than into the case.
@@Immolate62 When he uses the GPU for Premiere Pro rendering, it gets maxed out quickly -- more than most games. So heat will be a consideration any time he renders.
i think the rubber washers on the water cooler fans are there to stop the screws from unloosening themselves in addition to vibration isolation.
Nice build. I have had both AMD, and my current build uses Intel. I built it before AMD took the market back. The only thing I do not like are pin on chip CPUs. Just trying to remove the CPU cooler sometimes will pull the CPU out of the socket. I prefer land on chip, clamped down CPUs just for that reason. I have made forays in to water cooling, but have had 3 all in ones leak right out of the box. I went back to air cooling with a Noctua dual tower cooler. It works fine, is quiet, and has enough capacity to let me overclock my i7-5820K CPU. I really like be quiet! products, and chose them for my case fans, and power supply. I too installed my power supply upside down, and didn't realize it until I started smelling burning electronics. OOPS! I turned it over, and it does not appear to have caused any damage. It is still going strong after several years. Your case looks fantastic! I like the glass cover, and I love the way be quiet! has designed the component brackets.
I am currently using a rather cavernous Corsair case. I switched to a much better looking, and smaller case. It was much harder to build in, and my fan speeds, and thus noise levels went way up. I ended up switching back to the corsair. As for your build troubles, I have never built a computer that did not include some, um... practice installs?
Hi, Marius. What rendering parameters do you use to publish on UA-cam?
Very interesting and unexpected.
Very nice build, thanks for sharing. Don't forget to change the ram speed if you haven't already
Was the first thing I did once windows was installed
If anyone is interested I searched local USD prices on all but the "old PC" items and find its about $2325 to purchase online.
But a beautiful job as always, nice build!!
nice job :)
Very good
Marius, if you haven't already, in the BIOS, enable the XMP for the memory you chose. In the places where we could see memory speed, it was running slower than it is rated for. That's pretty common. But many folks don't realize how much perf you get on things like music and video editing by increasing the memory speed. Among other things (compilers, etc.) I do video and audio work on my PC, including Premiere Pro.
Nice build! I saw you used M2. i assume your MOB supports NVME and there were heat sinks included (It probably does as it is new) I thought the memory speed didn't match what I saw during post. Maybe my mistake. Finally you have a lot of memory and fast SSD so I'd check that with sustained use the system it stays cool to avoid issue down the road. I'm not sure if water cooling cools inside the case or just the CPU. In any case nice build!
Nice, not bad for your first AIO :D , only you should watch the temps of you M.2 SSD´s if they are runing to hot they slow down. if thats happen you should first remove the label on them so the thermal pad can remove the heat better. btw Ryzen CPU´s need for the first boot longer to really show something thats normal and no need to panic. :D
Pretty funny a lot of years ago we used to joke about the mainframe maintenance personell, that all they did was topping of water on the water cooled mainframes - now I guess you should remember totop off the water on your PC😬
Congratulations for your new PC !!! -Why there are not subtitles ?, english is not one of my strongs ... ;-)
Did you change your RAM speed settings? If you don't it will continue to run at 2133 MHz.
PCIE 4.0 NVME drives are now available to increase your sequential reads/write hugely. Your use case is what they are made for. Your motherboard is an X570 which supports PCIE 4.0.
It is what it is
Hallo Marius
die Komponenten die du ausgesucht hast sind ziemlich gut aber soweit ich das im Video gesehen habe hast du nur einen Lüfter der Luft ins Gehäuse bringt aber vier die die Luft wieder raus pusten. Das hat zur Folge, dass ein Unterdruck ensteht und nicht die komplette einströmende Luft gefiltert wird sondern auch durch die ganzen anderen kleinen Löcher im Gehäuse gezogen wird. Wodurch dein PC unnötig verstaubt. Deshalb würde ich den 2. Lüfter der dabei war noch in die Frot bauen und vielleicht auch noch einen 3. in den Boden. Das würde auch gleichzeitig deiner Grafikkarte helfen da diese daduch mehr kühle Luft bekommt.
Gute Idee, kann ich machen wenn ich wieder Zeit dafür finde
Getting ready to build my own video editing rig. In your opinion you think spending more on the cpu over the gpu is better for video editing computer?
Yes
If you're using Davinci Resolve for editing go for the high end GPU. For every other editing software more CPU cores is the way to go.
build a computer case of wood and a monitor cover - border ;)
I don't know what the hell all PC manufacturers think with fucking colors and flashing lights, what we want is speed, absolutely right Marius.
I lost the moment when you put thermopaste between the CPU and cooling system?
still better tutorial than the verges...
also i would have got bigger psu 850W would be better as modern psu's hit their optimal effency around 50% load. Also adding little more thermal paste would help usually. also only 3 ssd, i have 5 small ones, its all about capasity, 2Tb would be recommended asuming you play more than few games.
nice video
Hi Marius. Thank you for the video. I have a question: What about the audio card?
Looks like his mother board had audio built in.
@@chrisjones8741 Yes of course, but these never has a professional quality. I'm talking about your choice because my list for the future computer is very similar at yours. But now I'm understood your choice.
Thank you again.
Ariel Ramírez I wondered about that too. Maybe it’s good enough for Marius to use while editing, and the audio all comes in digitally via the camera anyway. Or maybe motherboard audio is better than it used to be 18 years ago when I was into all that kind of stuff.
I like the fact that you haven't chosen all those stupid flashing lights on the pc. Your is much more professional.
Excellent job and even more impressive considering it's your second time building a computer. Why didn't you start uploading your videos in 1440p or even 4K since finishing your PC?
Interesting video Marius...might even have a go myself now...is the water cooled system an enclosed system with the coolant being internal to the unit...I have no experience of these so your comment would be appreciated 👍🏻
Yes, everything is ready to go
"I dont care about RGB lightning [...] I will never look at it...."
Did buy case with side-window... 😁
funny thing is, if you try to get a case without a window, you're paying much more for it. I tried to just get a black box, it's about double the price of the cheapest case with a window, rgb system fans that look like unicorn vomited all over it.
there are a lot more cases with the current temper glass window style then there are that are just plain black boxes. it's not impossible, they aren't actually more expensive, i've bought plenty of cases. they cost around the same here.
Yeah they are kind of ubiquitous.
I have zero interest in computers but happily sat and watched this to the end. Your videos are great, regardless of the topic.
aaah the woes of watercooling. ow amd does recomand using an aio but you can get away with a large aircooler if you wont overclock the cpu.
overclocking ryzen 3000 isn't a viable option anyways
@@suit1337 it mostly depends on the silicon lottery. But you should be able to get a 100 to 200mhz more out of it on top of that you can also oc the infinity fabric as well
@@jeff2146 yes, but if you oc the infinity fabric you need to clock your ram higher too
ram clock is really the key for ryzen 3000 - you really need to win the silicon lottery like you said
110 watt cpu: water cooling, 160 watt gpu: two slot compact cooling.
Why amd suggests AIO? Something like NH-D15 has better thermal dissipation than most AIO:s.
What in your opinion is the best/easiest UA-cam vlog to watch for building a PC ...
I don't have any experience in building them, I normally buy Dell gaming PC's...
Linus tech tips
Seems you forgot to plug in the fan in the back.
I built my last PC 12 years ago and still use it every day. At the time I thought it was the bees knees, but I see now how much things have changed. Time to build a new one so my question to you is: what do you do with your old computer, or rather the parts you can't reuse?
PS: IMHO, air-cooling with the right heatsink can be just as quiet as water cooling without the maintenance and condensation issues.
Of course you already built it, long time this comment, but anyone reading this, correct install sequence is, mobo on case, psu with it's powercable connected to a grounded outlet but off, cpu, ram, any cables leading the mobo, any additional cards, and cooling is last. Also, never wear anything synthetic or wool. simple :)
You should build a little stool to sit on your PC. So one doesn't stand all the way down to the floor, you know dust
AMD is killing it right now. Nice machine.
Passing on RGB requires no explanation.
Reseating the motherboard 20 times fighting with fans and radiators... Been there, done that. LOL.
I always install the motherboard first.
I paid about the same of a 16MHz 386SX - but that was a while ago :-) (I still use the keyboard!)
I once bought a second hand 33Mhz 386SX, for £400 and upgraded it to an i486DX2-66 that (believe it or not) I found in a field while out walking :)
I'm usually not in the business of telling other people they're doing stuff wrong, especially online. BUT... For the love of what you hold dear, go buy yourself a NAS box. I recommend Synology's DS718+ or DS918+ (2 or 4 drives respectively). Load it with WD Red Pro drives and have it run at RAID-1 (mirroring). Having worked in IT since before finishing high-school, I'm in a good enoght position to tell you that there's no pain as losing irreplaceable data because you had it on a single HDD. EDIT: Stay safe!
Or just buy a Drobo. For non IT people, it's a better choice.
But he only makes 6 videos a year anyway, so the hard drives in his PC are really plenty.
@@Josef_R I wouldn't advise anyone to get a Drobo, save for some extremely non-technical people (think grandad with lots of photos). Synology products are almost just as plug-and-play and the default options and wizards always lead to a good config. There's also a ton of good documentation and their support is top-noch. Finally, Drobo does some weird software stuff with the way they handle data (not a "pure" RAID).
@@dimitrioslykissas7981 or you could just get a Drobo and not need documentation or support. What does their software weirdness matter if your data is reliably duplicated? But of course an IT person is gonna ridicule any non IT solution.
@@Josef_R My apologies for wasting your time. I thought, for a moment, that I was having a technical argument with a mature, knowledgeable and stable person. Please, go back to what you were doing.
@@dimitrioslykissas7981 haha, insults...the last refuge of the intolerant.
Hey, i would suggest you buy a NAS Like from Synology or sth. This could prevent you from buying satas for your PC and is a nice Thing to Work with. Local storage is not efficient from my pov. Anyway good Video. Cheers.
Could have gone with the msi ace motherboard and save about 150€ to spend instead on your graphics.
This is great. I have always been a PC guy, until my favorite PC UA-camr did a woodworking video out of the blue.. Now my favorite woodworking UA-camr is doing a PC video....
These guys are messing with me! lol. Great Build Marius!
Only tip i would offer, if you care to hear it, on the top of the case, put the fans on top of the radiator blowing down. the rubber ring going in between the case and the fans would help the fans be a bit quieter. But either way, its going to work fine, so ignore this comment completely if you like.
Keep up the great work, I love your videos.
Thought the PC would tell you in German to look at the screen :-) nice editing touch.
those rubber washers are most likely for spacing, preventing the fans from overtightend screws or both.
Ps: Bitte sag nicht du hast die Schutzfolie auf den pwr Kühlern drauf gelassen 0_o.