personal computers in a machining environment
- jackssmirkingrevenge
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here's what wants protecting - to all you techy folk out there, sound decent?
http://www.asus.com/Motherboards/Intel_ ... 55/P8H67M/
http://ark.intel.com/products/52207/Int ... _10-GHz%29
http://www.corsair.com/memory-by-produc ... 333c9.html
I'm keeping my old graphics card: http://www.amd.com/us/products/desktop/ ... rview.aspx
for cooling I picked up this and added another fan from my old cooler: http://www.coolermaster-usa.com/product ... ct_id=2923
http://www.asus.com/Motherboards/Intel_ ... 55/P8H67M/
http://ark.intel.com/products/52207/Int ... _10-GHz%29
http://www.corsair.com/memory-by-produc ... 333c9.html
I'm keeping my old graphics card: http://www.amd.com/us/products/desktop/ ... rview.aspx
for cooling I picked up this and added another fan from my old cooler: http://www.coolermaster-usa.com/product ... ct_id=2923
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
Personally if the price difference is not too great for you, I would try and go for the 2500K rather than the 2400... Here is a comparison between the two. while you can see that 2500K does perform a bit better, the main reason I suggest the 2500K is because it has unlocked core multipliers...
but I think if you go with the products you listed, it will make a decent PC, ASUS makes excellent motherboards, corsair makes good memory, the cooling is decent so I think that will make a fine computer...
but I think if you go with the products you listed, it will make a decent PC, ASUS makes excellent motherboards, corsair makes good memory, the cooling is decent so I think that will make a fine computer...
The voices in my head may not be real, but they have some good ideas!
- jackssmirkingrevenge
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While that sounds awesome, I have absolutely no idea what you are talking aboutHeimo wrote:I suggest the 2500K is because it has unlocked core multipliers...
This setup fit pretty well in budget, but now I'm wondering if my 650W power supply can keep up...
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
in plain terms, unlocked core multipliers means that Intel gave you a free pass to fiddle with the CPU speed as much as you like...jackssmirkingrevenge wrote:While that sounds awesome, I have absolutely no idea what you are talking aboutHeimo wrote:I suggest the 2500K is because it has unlocked core multipliers...
This setup fit pretty well in budget, but now I'm wondering if my 650W power supply can keep up...
it makes things like this possible...(notice the core speed, top left window)
also I am running a 2600K and only 700W Power supply, your 650W should do fine for that PC of yours
The voices in my head may not be real, but they have some good ideas!
Morning Jack
Don't be naif, not knowing about unlocked core multipliers is so yesterday.....................
What it means is that you can fiddle with the clock timing in the BIOS and "overclock" your CPU, much favored by gamers and those who relish unstable PC systems. Essentially it means you are running at red line 110%, I'm sure you can see the inevitable results from an engineering point of view.
Anyhow, back on topic.
One of the sites I manage is a drug manufacturer, lots of fine white power that loves to get into every nook and cranny of motherboards and power supplies. We have tried pretty much everything, filters, reversed fans, sealed cabinets with positive air flow, the lot. Eventually the white powder always wins.
What we use now are these http://www.umd.com.au/itd/products/senor_composer.html. They last about 18-24 months then usually develop some sort of heat related fault. Still better than our previous attempts.
For my own PC on the CNC machine in the man cave, I took your route. Mount it on the wall, as far away as possible, backup regularly including system restore points and be prepared to replace motherboards every now and then.
Don't be naif, not knowing about unlocked core multipliers is so yesterday.....................
What it means is that you can fiddle with the clock timing in the BIOS and "overclock" your CPU, much favored by gamers and those who relish unstable PC systems. Essentially it means you are running at red line 110%, I'm sure you can see the inevitable results from an engineering point of view.
Anyhow, back on topic.
One of the sites I manage is a drug manufacturer, lots of fine white power that loves to get into every nook and cranny of motherboards and power supplies. We have tried pretty much everything, filters, reversed fans, sealed cabinets with positive air flow, the lot. Eventually the white powder always wins.
What we use now are these http://www.umd.com.au/itd/products/senor_composer.html. They last about 18-24 months then usually develop some sort of heat related fault. Still better than our previous attempts.
For my own PC on the CNC machine in the man cave, I took your route. Mount it on the wall, as far away as possible, backup regularly including system restore points and be prepared to replace motherboards every now and then.
while this is true for the limit pushers like the one in the pic above, I must add that my previous PC that I did not care that much about, it was a 1.86GHz core 2 duo, I overclocked it to 2.8GHz and ran it at that speed for almost a year before I upgraded and passed that processor on to a friend, and I will add that it is still working 100%....evilvet wrote: What it means is that you can fiddle with the clock timing in the BIOS and "overclock" your CPU, much favored by gamers and those who relish unstable PC systems. Essentially it means you are running at red line 110%, I'm sure you can see the inevitable results from an engineering point of view.
The voices in my head may not be real, but they have some good ideas!
- jackssmirkingrevenge
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Impressive, but I'm clearly not one to fiddle with these thingsHeimo wrote:in plain terms, unlocked core multipliers means that Intel gave you a free pass to fiddle with the CPU speed as much as you like...
That's good to hearalso I am running a 2600K and only 700W Power supply, your 650W should do fine for that PC of yours
What it means is that you can fiddle with the clock timing in the BIOS and "overclock" your CPU, much favored by gamers and those who relish unstable PC systems. Essentially it means you are running at red line 110%, I'm sure you can see the inevitable results from an engineering point of view.
Come on, I wasn't labouring under the impression that overclocking was reaching over your coworker's shoulder to punch in before him ;p I know what it is, bu I'd have no idea how to go about it so best leave it to the fiddlers.
The parts are currently being set up by a friend more adept with machines of this nature, I'm sure he will abuse of the dual fan to run it slightly hotter.
Eventually the white powder always wins.
I've seen enough people hugging toilet bowls to know that to be true
Still, if there's white powder everywhere, something's not right. Is their microniser leaking
That's encouraging, I think between filters and high mount it should keep for a couple of years.For my own PC on the CNC machine in the man cave, I took your route.
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
- jackssmirkingrevenge
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Not one of these thenevilvet wrote:"Their microniser" is a guy called Tran, or Phong depending on the shift.
"Take a scoop, bang it against the edge them tip into the jar"
and I've guessing they don't use this to determine particle size either...
By "drug manufacturer" did you mean "meth lab" I think powder in their PCs is the least of their problems...
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
JSR,
Initially, it ain't the dust that screws you up. It's the cutting oil mist that causes the dust n dirt to stick to everything. We got a half dozen PC's in the main CNC bay. We just buy cheap PCs and let em run till they die. Yes, back up and all that stuff.
The chips are heavy and so don't fly far in here unless Mike is running a 2"endmill through aluminum at 6000 RPM. Then you got stuff bigger than airsoft pellets flying 20 feet. It's important to keep the PCs off the ground by at least 6 inches so the dust bunnies don't attack too quickly.
BTW, we allow no grinding in our shop for those very reasons. Grinding dust is the worst offender.
USGF
Initially, it ain't the dust that screws you up. It's the cutting oil mist that causes the dust n dirt to stick to everything. We got a half dozen PC's in the main CNC bay. We just buy cheap PCs and let em run till they die. Yes, back up and all that stuff.
The chips are heavy and so don't fly far in here unless Mike is running a 2"endmill through aluminum at 6000 RPM. Then you got stuff bigger than airsoft pellets flying 20 feet. It's important to keep the PCs off the ground by at least 6 inches so the dust bunnies don't attack too quickly.
BTW, we allow no grinding in our shop for those very reasons. Grinding dust is the worst offender.
USGF
- jackssmirkingrevenge
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I see, in my case cutting oil is used quite sparingly so I don't think it should be much of an issue. I spent about $650 on upgrayedding (double D for a double dose of this pimpin') so I'm not too keen on "letting it die"USGF wrote:Initially, it ain't the dust that screws you up. It's the cutting oil mist that causes the dust n dirt to stick to everything. We got a half dozen PC's in the main CNC bay. We just buy cheap PCs and let em run till they die. Yes, back up and all that stuff.
The chips are heavy and so don't fly far in here unless Mike is running a 2"endmill through aluminum at 6000 RPM. Then you got stuff bigger than airsoft pellets flying 20 feet. It's important to keep the PCs off the ground by at least 6 inches so the dust bunnies don't attack too quickly.
Fair point, I currently just mounted it on the desktop and that's probably sufficient, no need to have it virtually airborne.
I don't have a bench grinder yet but when I do, it will be mounted in another room.BTW, we allow no grinding in our shop for those very reasons. Grinding dust is the worst offender.
Got my PC back in the meantime and it's fantastic, in a way I'm glad it screwed up. Hope to give this dewey, I know flight sims are your thing, tried this yet? a spin when I get home, sorry lathe and mill :-/
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
Surely you could fashion a few lugs onto the PC case to suspend it mid-air... Word on the street is that you already have most of the fixtures.
I really must start contributing to this forum and not simply using it as a way to siphon off excess smartassery...
I really must start contributing to this forum and not simply using it as a way to siphon off excess smartassery...
I wonder how much deeper the ocean would be without sponges.
Right now I'm having amnesia and deja vu at the same time. I think I've forgotten this before.
Add me on msn!!! insomniac-55@hotmail.com
Right now I'm having amnesia and deja vu at the same time. I think I've forgotten this before.
Add me on msn!!! insomniac-55@hotmail.com
- jackssmirkingrevenge
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Hahahaha...haha...ha......hmmm...
*ahem*
*ahem*
Hear hear ;PInsomniac wrote:I really must start contributing to this forum and not simply using it as a way to siphon off excess smartassery...
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life
Which OS; W7 32 or 64 bit, Home or Pro?jackssmirkingrevenge wrote: Got my PC back in the meantime and it's fantastic, in a way I'm glad it screwed up. Hope to give this dewey, I know flight sims are your thing, tried this yet? a spin when I get home, sorry lathe and mill :-/
Did you set it up to be a dual boot machine?
I am more into modern aircraft like this free program.
For headtracking use this free program.
I prefer this program over another as can be seen here for FPS games.
- jackssmirkingrevenge
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W7 "ultimate", I suppose it's 64 bitdewey-1 wrote:Which OS; W7 32 or 64 bit, Home or Pro?
I'm picturing the tower balanced on a couple of shoes but I'm quite confident that's not what you meanDid you set it up to be a dual boot machine?
Do you mean it can run two different OS?
Disregarded the joys of aerial combat for this last night
edit: thinking of some graphics card cooling, how doesthis cheap-oh nameless model sound?
hectmarr wrote:You have to make many weapons, because this field is long and short life