jawzforlife
New member
Building a new computer. Went to the store (micro center) to pick up a i7-860 CPU.
On the recommendation of the guy helping me build the system, I was going to get a "aftermarket" CPU cooling fan, but they were sold out so I could not get it.
The sales guy said I didn't need it anyways and to just use the stock fan in the i7-860 box.
Should I just use the stock CPU fan, or hook up an aftermarket one?
As of right now I don't plan on overclocking the system.
On the recommendation of the guy helping me build the system, I was going to get a "aftermarket" CPU cooling fan, but they were sold out so I could not get it.
The sales guy said I didn't need it anyways and to just use the stock fan in the i7-860 box.
Should I just use the stock CPU fan, or hook up an aftermarket one?
As of right now I don't plan on overclocking the system.
My Computer
At a glance
Windows 7 Home Premium x64Intel i7 860 2.8GHzG.SKILL Ripjaws DDR3 1600, 8gbGIGABYTE (GV-R455D3-512I)
- OS
- Windows 7 Home Premium x64
- CPU
- Intel i7 860 2.8GHz
- Motherboard
- MSI (P-55-GD65)
- Memory
- G.SKILL Ripjaws DDR3 1600, 8gb
- Graphics Card(s)
- GIGABYTE (GV-R455D3-512I)
- Monitor(s) Displays
- DELL 20.1" LCD
- Screen Resolution
- 1680 x 1050
- Hard Drives
- WD 500gb 7200rpm
- PSU
- OCZ 700watt (OCZ700SXS)
- Case
- XCLIO (Godspeed Two Advanced)
- Cooling
- COOLMASTER (Hyper 212+)
- Keyboard
- microsoft comfort 5000
- Mouse
- microsoft comfort 5000
- Internet Speed
- DSL
- Other Info
- LAPTOP:
HP Pavilion dv4-2164us
Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit
Intel i3-330m
4gb ram /
NETBOOK:
HP Mini 110-3130nr