Appreciate the feedback on this video! Since we didn't have a 6-8pin adapter in house at the time of filming, we went with what we had which isn't recommended. Definitely repeat this with a 6-8 pin for best results! Will work on improving this in the future :)
You should have shown the performance of the original parts and not swap them out like the hhd and gpu. So that we can truly gauge the real perf of this ultra budget pc.
Dudes? Don't worry about it! 😊 What you did was exactly what anyone else would have done in a BUDGET situation, and you did that perfectly. It's spot on to what anyone else would do in if they only has a few quid to spend on a PC as not everyone is made of money, or even has a way to get good PC parts outside of a garage sale or recycling center or Goodwill / Thrift store. Nothing is going to Burn down as so many have put it here. Most are simply just following the Lulz crowd. If I may, your next budget build series should be how to use those 16GB intel Optane drives to boost the performance of the cheap SSD's from TEMU or aliexpress that come in at 1TB and see if you can overclock the CPU's in some of these Old XEON systems. We in the car community have to sometimes stick with what we got on hand. See if you can focus on that and you would have a really gem of a video on your hands.
You should have used a 6 pin to 8 pin adapter. The 1660 only uses around 120-130w, the 6 pin is rated for 150w so unlike your sata solution it would actually be decently safe. Keep a few 6 pin to 8 pin adapters laying around, they are great for those workstation pcs.
6 pin is 75W and 8 pin 150W. But the extra 2 pins are actually just ground, so if the cable is thick, pretty much every old 6 pin is already easily gonna handle 150W.
6 Pin to 8 Pin PCIe adapters are perfectly safe. The extra 2 pins are just ground - meaning most PCIe cables can already handle the 150W that the 8 pins are specced for.
0:57 Fun fact that I found and tried recently, there are a lot of different types of packing peanuts that are water soluble and in most countries is safe to wash them down the sink. Note that not all peanuts are water soluble to test them first before dumping them all in ur sink.
Not sure why you went with the sata too pci-e 6+2 pin there. The 2 extra pins are ground pins, but if you want too be sure the 8 pin has proper power. By combining the two 6 pins the powersupply 6 pin & the sata to 6 pin adapter into an 8 pin, that's probably the best option for ensuring full power.
I've had a 3060Ti (200W TDP) installed in a 3620 with the 365W PS and 6-8 adapter no problem. 150W through the six pin and 50w through the PCIe slot. also ran prime95 with the i7-7700 for 2 hours straight with no issues.
In my HP Z240 (which has a 400W 80+ Platinum PSU) I just used a 6-Pin to 8-Pin adapter to get my GTX 1070 running. And my CPU is the same Xeon E3-1270 V5. This CPU is equvalent to the i7-6700 non-k but with a slightly higher clock. I mean: The 8-Pin is not much more and mainly just has an additional ground pin. But the cables themselves can handle the theoretical additional power, which the GPUs themselves oftentimes don't actually need. Most GPUs that could easily live with a 6-Pin just come with an 8-Pin connector these days. Like the 6-Pin seems to be fading out apart from those prebuilt systems. And I'd feel much safer with a 6-Pin to 8-Pin adapter than with some SATA power adapters.
I'd recommend old HP Z440. Usually came with a decent 4 or 6 core xeon and 16 or 32gb ram. The main benefit is most of them had a 600w psu with a 6pin pcie that can easily be adapted to and 8 pin opening the door for more gpu options.
I did one of these with a 3050. Performs pretty well. Mine came with a 6700k and I made use of the open m.2 slot next to the font-panel header as the boot drive. I replaced the PSU and used a 24-6 pin adapter. The original PSU didn't have the 6 pin for the gpu.
was grazing alliexrpess after one of your vids and came across a 1080 non ti model for 56$, i'd like to see a vid with that in a budget build if possible :) great vid as always :D
Not recomended those cheap cards are recycled from former cards taht were used for mining , they just take teh aprts out resolder them into new boards , as a result the integrity of the card come sto question with many of them dying very soon but most dangerously many have temperature issues , dangerous stuff
lol but they have no problem recommending the rx580s from there hmmm, I honestly wouldn't use any card from there, they do plenty of things on this channel they don't recommend but w/e its curiosity and interest in possible content, and definitely was in no way a recommendation for a card, but as they've stated before, sometimes the situation dictates this may be some ppl's only option for PC components :D @@robotron07
Just the ones with 365W PSUs. I had to upgrade mine Precision with 24-to-8 Pin, but then I plopped a Seasonic Focus Plus 80+ Platinum in it, which no problem powered the GTX 1060 i added (PALIT GTX 1060 6GB Super Jetstream). BTW, Dell's PSU in those PCs are made by Seasonic, too, meaning that dimensions are an exact match, no issues swapping them, too.
The HP Z series workstations are still powerful enough and underrated and they offer dual CPU slots that can take hex Xeons which doubles the RAM you can use. I use an older Z600 for music and its maxed out with 128Gb Ram for Kontakt and its an absolute beast. I installed a LSI SATA3/SAS card with 4 internal ports and external SAS socket I have connect a raid array and upgraded to the 1060 6Gb card for dual 4k displays. It happily runs windows 11 without any driver issues albeit without the added security which I just do not need as its a standalone system. It happily runs 4k video with Dolby Atmos and Vision.
i got a dell optiplex 3020. i put 16gb of ram in it and stuck a radeon 580 and a i5 in it as well could you review? seems to work really good for a cheap PC
I scored a Dell Precision 3620 workstation last year for $120 shipped. It has the I5 6500 and slot for an M.2 NVME so I installed one and also 32GB of 2133 DDR4 Ram. It's a nice machine but I'm using a slightly older DDR3 ram HPZ 620 Xeon 6 core 12 thread1650v2 (3.50-3.90 Ghz) with a GTX 1060 to get my feet wet to gaming. The proprietary PSU's are the only drawback so far because they need a 6 to 8 pin adapter but the HPZ 620 has an 800W PSU.
you guys should try a machinist mr9pro with a xeon 2667 v4 + elsa/soyo rx5700 with 16 gbs of juhor ddr4, its slighty more pricey than these pcs shown in the video but a good amount more powerful.
undervolt and overclock the GPU, use a 6pin to 8 pin adapter, also Fortnite works better in DX12 shadows are the major cause of stutter turn that down or off post processing can also be lowered. make sure to set Nvidia control panel for Fortnite power to high performance and vsync to fast vsync in game off unlimited FPS then use riva tuner to cap the fps to the refresh rate of the monitor or minus 2 fps for example if the monitor is 144Hz set the frame cap to 142 fps because the frames will spike over the set value
Question: can a dell optiplex with i5 or i7 6500/6700 - 8500/8700 with 32 gb ram and a gtx 1650 be enough to: do photoshop, after effects, light premier, front end developing and electric/electronic circuit simulation? I am a engineer student with a tight budget
Using one of those dual sata power to pcie is perfectly fine. Normal gaming operations will be no problem. Those connectors have a bad name mostly from miners and hard overclocks.
Running a very similar rig and have been for a year. Dell optiplex 9020 16gb ram SSD at 1TB GTX 1660 super (same power adaptor). Stock PSU. All in £210. Do you think there is any benefit to the processor upgrade to i7 6700 ? I considered the i7 4790K some time ago but don’t really see the point. I bought a PS4 instead for the E sports stuff.. . My peoples Runs Jedi fallen order Jedi survivor Robocop and cyber punk to name a few. PS so far no Fires! 😀
Does this TEAMGROUP MP44S High Performance SSD 1TB SLC Cache Gen 4x4 M.2 2230 PCIe com with a mounting adapter? I haven't older motherboard which is still in good condition ASUS P5Q PREMIUM.
Sata to 8 pins or 6 pins can be safe if you are smart, Sata power ussaly can send about 45 watts and be fine, I have a sata to 6 pin and I have a 90 watt card so that means only 15 watts is being used from the sata power which ussaly makes it safer than overloading it
I have that exact same graphic card except mine is GTX 1650 Super and was lucky to score it open box and still good for those dell optiplex. But what cool is you can swap out power supply. I ended up swapping mine out for an EVGA 450 Watt and from there was set for using those 1650 or 1660 cards.
A 6 to 8 pin adapter would be way better than this. The 6 pin also would’ve worked just fine in these lower power draw 8 pin cards, 6 pins is enough to power them.
So my hp z420 Has a 4 pin pci e power. I already used an adapter to go to 6 pin for a 1060. Thinking about using a 6 to 8 pin and going to a 2060 super. Should I video the experiment and see if flames shoot out? 😂
i was planning on buying an old Lenovo thinkcenter to upgrade, it has 16 gigs of ram, an i5 6500 and integrated graphics, and i was planning on putting a 1650 in it because of its low power usage, but if anyone has any advice i would really appreciate it
My 1660 super with one 8 pin connector draws upto 125watts ish in unigine heaven. Yes it can and will draw that much power. And thats not mentioning OC stuff just basic power limit.
If this thing had a 6th or 7th gen core i5 or i7 with a 550 watts power supply even if it is 150$ it's definitely worth considering Slap a GTX 1080 for 125$ and you get a VERY capable 275$ gaming PC, with 40$ for an SSD it's 315$ gaming rig which is a phenomenal price
Fortnite seemed a bit stuttery. The Xeon is a bit low in frequency. You could have used a 6 to 8 pin adapter wich shouldn't have been a problem, I mean the power draw is pretty much the same with a 1060 6gb and that card has 6 pin pci-e plug so yeah 125w with a 6 to 8 pin adapter shouldn't be an issue
They do make a 6 to 8 adapter that is rated to 75 watts. Better than sata. I know you probably just had one on.hand to make it work for video. Just throwing it out there. And yes i know 8 pin should be 150 watts
Appreciate the feedback on this video! Since we didn't have a 6-8pin adapter in house at the time of filming, we went with what we had which isn't recommended. Definitely repeat this with a 6-8 pin for best results! Will work on improving this in the future :)
Use a two 6 pin to 8 pin use the sata six and the psu 6 and split the load 30 watts per cable simple
You guys said this PC can play anything but I just checked and it can't play Alan Wake II!😁
@@LiquidSnake690good
You should have shown the performance of the original parts and not swap them out like the hhd and gpu. So that we can truly gauge the real perf of this ultra budget pc.
Dudes? Don't worry about it! 😊 What you did was exactly what anyone else would have done in a BUDGET situation, and you did that perfectly. It's spot on to what anyone else would do in if they only has a few quid to spend on a PC as not everyone is made of money, or even has a way to get good PC parts outside of a garage sale or recycling center or Goodwill / Thrift store.
Nothing is going to Burn down as so many have put it here. Most are simply just following the Lulz crowd.
If I may, your next budget build series should be how to use those 16GB intel Optane drives to boost the performance of the cheap SSD's from TEMU or aliexpress that come in at 1TB and see if you can overclock the CPU's in some of these Old XEON systems.
We in the car community have to sometimes stick with what we got on hand. See if you can focus on that and you would have a really gem of a video on your hands.
You should have used a 6 pin to 8 pin adapter. The 1660 only uses around 120-130w, the 6 pin is rated for 150w so unlike your sata solution it would actually be decently safe.
Keep a few 6 pin to 8 pin adapters laying around, they are great for those workstation pcs.
agreed, came here to say the same thing.
6 pin is 75W and 8 pin 150W. But the extra 2 pins are actually just ground, so if the cable is thick, pretty much every old 6 pin is already easily gonna handle 150W.
I used one for HD 3870X2 back in the day without any issues. :D
You mean the 12 - 15 yr old fortnight slayers. 🤣🤣🤣@@ShadyButFresh
Yes I'd do a 6 to 8 pin adapter over doing a sata to 8pin adapter first
6 Pin to 8 Pin PCIe adapters are perfectly safe. The extra 2 pins are just ground - meaning most PCIe cables can already handle the 150W that the 8 pins are specced for.
i have a whole drawer of them i pulled from dell pre builts
0:57
Fun fact that I found and tried recently, there are a lot of different types of packing peanuts that are water soluble and in most countries is safe to wash them down the sink. Note that not all peanuts are water soluble to test them first before dumping them all in ur sink.
Not sure why you went with the sata too pci-e 6+2 pin there.
The 2 extra pins are ground pins, but if you want too be sure the 8 pin has proper power.
By combining the two 6 pins the powersupply 6 pin & the sata to 6 pin adapter into an 8 pin, that's probably the best option for ensuring full power.
6-pin to 8-pin adapters are a thing. They are wonderful
they lost me when they didn't do that and continued like the6 to 8 pins don't exist haha
But melting power ports are not.
@@InterlacedTech on a 1660super? ? ? No. . .
If you are going to use this I recommend getting a 6 pin to 8 pin pcie since pcie is made to handle gpus and the 1660 only draws 130w
all support guys keep the great content i really love this budget series
I've had a 3060Ti (200W TDP) installed in a 3620 with the 365W PS and 6-8 adapter no problem. 150W through the six pin and 50w through the PCIe slot. also ran prime95 with the i7-7700 for 2 hours straight with no issues.
I love to watch you guys game when you test the pcs
In my HP Z240 (which has a 400W 80+ Platinum PSU) I just used a 6-Pin to 8-Pin adapter to get my GTX 1070 running. And my CPU is the same Xeon E3-1270 V5. This CPU is equvalent to the i7-6700 non-k but with a slightly higher clock. I mean: The 8-Pin is not much more and mainly just has an additional ground pin. But the cables themselves can handle the theoretical additional power, which the GPUs themselves oftentimes don't actually need. Most GPUs that could easily live with a 6-Pin just come with an 8-Pin connector these days. Like the 6-Pin seems to be fading out apart from those prebuilt systems. And I'd feel much safer with a 6-Pin to 8-Pin adapter than with some SATA power adapters.
I'd recommend old HP Z440. Usually came with a decent 4 or 6 core xeon and 16 or 32gb ram. The main benefit is most of them had a 600w psu with a 6pin pcie that can easily be adapted to and 8 pin opening the door for more gpu options.
I agree with you but the issue is the Price.. it's abt twice the price of the pc in the video not upgraded
Use to run HEAVY work loads on this machine at a media center, batch overnight renders, huge premiere timelines... good machine.
Sata to 8 pin adapters normally can handle around 55w. They are not dangerous if you buy a quality one and used within spec.
I did one of these with a 3050. Performs pretty well. Mine came with a 6700k and I made use of the open m.2 slot next to the font-panel header as the boot drive. I replaced the PSU and used a 24-6 pin adapter. The original PSU didn't have the 6 pin for the gpu.
this pc's performance seems amazing!
To mount SSDs I have used Command Strips with some judicious trimming them to 4 small squares
The performance of this is super impressive
The 1660 ti I had ran off the 6 pin in the 8 pin slot. I wouldn't suggest it but it works when you're broke.
You guys need to do a video on how to upgrade a older laptop with DVD player built-in
was grazing alliexrpess after one of your vids and came across a 1080 non ti model for 56$, i'd like to see a vid with that in a budget build if possible :) great vid as always :D
Not recomended those cheap cards are recycled from former cards taht were used for mining , they just take teh aprts out resolder them into new boards , as a result the integrity of the card come sto question with many of them dying very soon but most dangerously many have temperature issues , dangerous stuff
lol but they have no problem recommending the rx580s from there hmmm, I honestly wouldn't use any card from there, they do plenty of things on this channel they don't recommend but w/e its curiosity and interest in possible content, and definitely was in no way a recommendation for a card, but as they've stated before, sometimes the situation dictates this may be some ppl's only option for PC components :D @@robotron07
Some of these Dell Precision towers in that form factor come with an extra 6 pin power cable that directly comes off the PSU
Just the ones with 365W PSUs. I had to upgrade mine Precision with 24-to-8 Pin, but then I plopped a Seasonic Focus Plus 80+ Platinum in it, which no problem powered the GTX 1060 i added (PALIT GTX 1060 6GB Super Jetstream).
BTW, Dell's PSU in those PCs are made by Seasonic, too, meaning that dimensions are an exact match, no issues swapping them, too.
@@gmaacentralfounder 🤔
I had a buddy help me build a optiplex 3020 got a 1660 super to put in it for $70 definitely a steal
lack of mounting holes for Sata SSD drives is the reason i invested in a small wealth of velcro tape. that, and zip ties.
if its like an Rx 470 or a 5500 it can work off just the 6 pin fine.
The HP Z series workstations are still powerful enough and underrated and they offer dual CPU slots that can take hex Xeons which doubles the RAM you can use. I use an older Z600 for music and its maxed out with 128Gb Ram for Kontakt and its an absolute beast. I installed a LSI SATA3/SAS card with 4 internal ports and external SAS socket I have connect a raid array and upgraded to the 1060 6Gb card for dual 4k displays. It happily runs windows 11 without any driver issues albeit without the added security which I just do not need as its a standalone system. It happily runs 4k video with Dolby Atmos and Vision.
they have 6 pin to 8 pin adapters and they work great nothing to worry about like sata to 8 pin
i got a dell optiplex 3020. i put 16gb of ram in it and stuck a radeon 580 and a i5 in it as well could you review? seems to work really good for a cheap PC
I picked up a T1700 since Optiplexes are way too much these days for what they are, and I’m converting it to an AM5 build.
That’s great for starters considering it can play almost any game on 1080p
5:20 why don't you use a more safe 6 pin to 8 pin adapter?
Hope you keep a fire extinguisher handy.
Looking it up the 6pin connector should be good for 75 watts. With the 75 from the board you should have been good with the 6 pin.
Sata to pcie 8pin is completely safe just check the rail attached sata only allows 100watts max throughput
Used a similar setup with that adapter on a RX580 for years. They work.
I had one of those converter cables melt - got sooo hot it shorted out the PSU and went pop - but the graphics card survived.
Performance isn't bad for the price. I'm not sure people shouldn't just build a (mostly) new low end pc though I get that can be intimidating.
I agree its best just get a pwoer supply that will be able to power GPU and right gfor the motherboard too
you do know you could most likly plug the 6 pin into the 8pin slot and gpu would prob work fine
I scored a Dell Precision 3620 workstation last year for $120 shipped. It has the I5 6500 and slot for an M.2 NVME so I installed one and also 32GB of 2133 DDR4 Ram. It's a nice machine but I'm using a slightly older DDR3 ram HPZ 620 Xeon 6 core 12 thread1650v2 (3.50-3.90 Ghz) with a GTX 1060 to get my feet wet to gaming. The proprietary PSU's are the only drawback so far because they need a 6 to 8 pin adapter but the HPZ 620 has an 800W PSU.
That 800W is overkill, 500W is more than enough
@@xXVibrantSnowXx Yes indeed it is for my needs but that is what the HPZ 620 came with. I'm currently using it to test out old used GPU's.
About connector coniser undervolting without overclocking - better 10 fps less than fire hazard and fireworks in own room.
you guys should try a machinist mr9pro with a xeon 2667 v4 + elsa/soyo rx5700 with 16 gbs of juhor ddr4, its slighty more pricey than these pcs shown in the video but a good amount more powerful.
Just ordered machinist x99 pr, e5 2670v3, 16gb ram and Elsa rx5700. Costed roughly 200€ combined.
I will unlock turbo on all cores and kill the multithreading. Slight raise of the bclk and flash the rx5700.
Why didn't you use the built-in 6 pin and the +2 only from the sata adaptor? Wouldn't this be a safer solution that avoidfriedcables ?
Nice upgrading
Why not add a NVME SSD. I’m pretty sure I saw the slot on the motherboard. Would have been better than a regular SSD.
You don't really need that for such a simple build lol
Just got this PC and I am now upgrading it
Does it work?
@@TautaS123 sadly haven’t finish it yet
Wow technology is getting amazing by the second that's a small SSD dam
Soon graphics card will look like this 🎉🎉
Nice Temps too.
That little Fornite jingle was top tier... had me bobbing my head 😅
You should have used the 6 pin connector from PSU and then just the 2 pin off of the sata adapter. Let me know if it works LOL.
undervolt and overclock the GPU, use a 6pin to 8 pin adapter, also Fortnite works better in DX12 shadows are the major cause of stutter turn that down or off post processing can also be lowered. make sure to set Nvidia control panel for Fortnite power to high performance and vsync to fast vsync in game off unlimited FPS then use riva tuner to cap the fps to the refresh rate of the monitor or minus 2 fps for example if the monitor is 144Hz set the frame cap to 142 fps because the frames will spike over the set value
Question: can a dell optiplex with i5 or i7 6500/6700 - 8500/8700 with 32 gb ram and a gtx 1650 be enough to: do photoshop, after effects, light premier, front end developing and electric/electronic circuit simulation? I am a engineer student with a tight budget
Using one of those dual sata power to pcie is perfectly fine. Normal gaming operations will be no problem. Those connectors have a bad name mostly from miners and hard overclocks.
Running a very similar rig and have been for a year. Dell optiplex 9020 16gb ram SSD at 1TB GTX 1660 super (same power adaptor). Stock PSU. All in £210. Do you think there is any benefit to the processor upgrade to i7 6700 ? I considered the i7 4790K some time ago but don’t really see the point. I bought a PS4 instead for the E sports stuff.. . My peoples Runs Jedi fallen order Jedi survivor Robocop and cyber punk to name a few. PS so far no Fires! 😀
Does this TEAMGROUP MP44S High Performance SSD 1TB SLC Cache Gen 4x4 M.2 2230 PCIe com with a mounting adapter? I haven't older motherboard which is still in good condition ASUS P5Q PREMIUM.
sorry for commenting so many times but i would REALLY like to ask.. where can i find this pc??
Sata to 8 pins or 6 pins can be safe if you are smart, Sata power ussaly can send about 45 watts and be fine, I have a sata to 6 pin and I have a 90 watt card so that means only 15 watts is being used from the sata power which ussaly makes it safer than overloading it
Preventing everyone from saying first
Thank u bru
This looks like exactly like my pc without modification wow
Why didn't you use a 6-pin to 8-pin pci-e power adapter? I think maybe you should buy a few.
pcie does give power but some cards only pull power from the 6/8 pin or at least most of their power
I have that exact same graphic card except mine is GTX 1650 Super and was lucky to score it open box and still good for those dell optiplex. But what cool is you can swap out power supply. I ended up swapping mine out for an EVGA 450 Watt and from there was set for using those 1650 or 1660 cards.
7:40 you know where this shape goes? That’s right the square hole
Would the same result happen with the Dell precision t1650? What other upgrades can one do?
would you recommend this over P520? I personally like P520 better. E3 vs E5 Xeon.
A 6 to 8 pin adapter would be way better than this. The 6 pin also would’ve worked just fine in these lower power draw 8 pin cards, 6 pins is enough to power them.
Would you use 6-8pin converter that use the 6pin and converts it to 8 pin
So my hp z420
Has a 4 pin pci e power. I already used an adapter to go to 6 pin for a 1060. Thinking about using a 6 to 8 pin and going to a 2060 super. Should I video the experiment and see if flames shoot out? 😂
Can you have more budget pc builds btw I liked my own comment😅
Who cares that you liked it
great video! keep it up!
U didn’t even watch the video yet bro it barely was private be quiet
there's also a dual sata to 8 pin adapter...
BRO PLAYS VVERY WELL!!!!
can you also put an arc a380 in a dell pc without change the cpu and power supply?
If I use a sata to pcie 6 pin should I plug both sata adapters on the same cable or use a sata from 2 separate cables?
You could also do dual SATA to 8pin.
i was planning on buying an old Lenovo thinkcenter to upgrade, it has 16 gigs of ram, an i5 6500 and integrated graphics, and i was planning on putting a 1650 in it because of its low power usage, but if anyone has any advice i would really appreciate it
I got the same pc but its power supply didn’t have the 6 pin for a gpu, it only had a 4 pin and a 8pin for the board
My 1660 super with one 8 pin connector draws upto 125watts ish in unigine heaven. Yes it can and will draw that much power. And thats not mentioning OC stuff just basic power limit.
would a 1660 super be a good pair for my 4570 cpu?
If im not mistaken the 1660 aero doesn't require external power
Upgrade psu and use a 24 pin to 8 pin adapter for motherboard power
Do a 6 to 8 pin connector.
If this thing had a 6th or 7th gen core i5 or i7 with a 550 watts power supply even if it is 150$ it's definitely worth considering
Slap a GTX 1080 for 125$ and you get a VERY capable 275$ gaming PC, with 40$ for an SSD it's 315$ gaming rig which is a phenomenal price
so is there a better way to power the gpu in retrospect?
Fortnite seemed a bit stuttery. The Xeon is a bit low in frequency. You could have used a 6 to 8 pin adapter wich shouldn't have been a problem, I mean the power draw is pretty much the same with a 1060 6gb and that card has 6 pin pci-e plug so yeah 125w with a 6 to 8 pin adapter shouldn't be an issue
cheap builds are nice too see for the newer pc buyers
would a rx580 work with the psu
iirc anything after the 1650 needs the extra connector.
They do make a 6 to 8 adapter that is rated to 75 watts. Better than sata. I know you probably just had one on.hand to make it work for video. Just throwing it out there. And yes i know 8 pin should be 150 watts
Is there any cheaper alternatives to the gpu
i use that sata adapter everyday no problems 2 8pin on a gtx 1080.no using it on a rtx super in a dell precision 3630 ..lol i may be lucky ion know..
Can we have an update on the adapter? Did it survive?
Can you do a 4k graphic high end build
Only in the US do you find kit this cheap. It would cost me more than double in Australia and I think in the EU it would be even 50% more again.
Should I upgrade from a gtx 1050 to a gtx 1660 super?
do A 25$ GAMING pc also good vid
static electricity is a good reason not to use packing peanuts
Experimental bros are on fire!!
Since the making of this vid the prices skyrocketed
You guys should order the lenovo or HP oem 1660 super it uses a 6 pin.