Okay, more advice needed
Jul. 8th, 2009 10:49 pmSo. I've looked over my system. Turns out the power supply is strangely situated at the base of the unit (check it out) and it's a pain to get out and it's thin. So I can't replace it easily.
I've purchased an ATI Radeo HD2600 Pro 512 MB DDR2, which says it needs 400 watts to operate. It'll be delivered tomorrow.
ETA: Looks like it's a VisionTek model, and it needs 300 watts.
The system's power supply is rated at 460 watts.
I've seen someone on the forums who apparently is running a similar card, with no worries. Most people, though, seem to be suggesting that a separate power supply is necessary.
Dell Dimension XPS Series (Gen 2)
Pentium 4 Processor at 3 GHz w/ 800MHz front side bus
3 gigs ram
Hard drive
DVD drive
CD drive
Floppy drive (I actually forgot about it, lol)
It's hooked to these peripherals:
Scanner
Two printers (only one is turned on, generally)
Camera (only sporadically)
Speakers
Broadband wireless device
So what do you think? Should I hazard putting in the card and hooking it in to the main power supply? Or should I get the card its own separate power supply and just rig it out of the case? Thoughts would be incredibly appreciated.
I've purchased an ATI Radeo HD2600 Pro 512 MB DDR2, which says it needs 400 watts to operate. It'll be delivered tomorrow.
ETA: Looks like it's a VisionTek model, and it needs 300 watts.
The system's power supply is rated at 460 watts.
I've seen someone on the forums who apparently is running a similar card, with no worries. Most people, though, seem to be suggesting that a separate power supply is necessary.
Dell Dimension XPS Series (Gen 2)
Pentium 4 Processor at 3 GHz w/ 800MHz front side bus
3 gigs ram
Hard drive
DVD drive
CD drive
Floppy drive (I actually forgot about it, lol)
It's hooked to these peripherals:
Scanner
Two printers (only one is turned on, generally)
Camera (only sporadically)
Speakers
Broadband wireless device
So what do you think? Should I hazard putting in the card and hooking it in to the main power supply? Or should I get the card its own separate power supply and just rig it out of the case? Thoughts would be incredibly appreciated.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-07-09 12:51 pm (UTC)Oh, but that's my point--you don't have to add it all up. Like I said, it's like RAM--if a game requires 1 GB, it doesn't need 1 GB just to itself... it means that your computer should have 1 GB installed, regardless of what other programs you're running at the same time that would also use memory.
Obviously you don't want to push it too far, but if the card says it requires a 300-watt supply and you have a 460, you're fine.
People on computer forums really, really like to tell everyone that they need more, more, more, and oftentimes it's simply not true.
The connections, though, bah. It may. IDK... I guess you'll have to see when it arrives.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-07-09 03:22 pm (UTC)We'll see what happens! I'm going to cross my fingers about the connections, though. :)
(no subject)
Date: 2009-07-09 04:35 pm (UTC)(I'm running a Dell with a 460-watt and a card that has 400 watt specs, and I never turn the arsing thing off. I do mean never. =D It's fine. The only thing I'd be worried about is the connections. Hopefully they're compatible.)
(no subject)
Date: 2009-07-09 04:36 pm (UTC)If you already have two ginormous fans, though, you should be fine. Some Radeon video cards actually come with their own little fans attached, too. =D
(no subject)
Date: 2009-07-09 05:32 pm (UTC)It has two huge fans, plus two fans in the base and a fan in the front. The power supply fans in the base are the ones I'm most worried about. *crosses fingers*
And yep, it needs two power connections. Here's hoping that once I crack the case open I have them both. I'm not holding my breath, though.
(no subject)
Date: 2009-07-09 05:42 pm (UTC)