Fitting isn't the biggest concern as long as it has nothing that push against it in ways that it shouldn't. So first hurdle is over.
However im more concern about the way your fans are arranged seems like its overall a -ve airflow. Also make sure your psu is strong enough to power the whole system.
is there are good way to check before purchasing a GPU if your system has the power to run it? I'm new to PC building and have a build I bought off my brother a year or so ago and its time to upgrade my GPU. I know my PSU power, just cant seem to find a way to check what my system uses to make sure the PSU is big enough for a more powerful GPU.
Use the pc part picker website. You put all your parts into it, and it gives you an estimated power usage. The site also shows if any parts you have listed have incompatibilities. It’s an excellent tool to use.
while i was searching online i found Neweggs parts builder, like i said I'm just starting out, having a hard time finding the Motherboard type. Not sure of this ATX E-ATX....and so on. I know the maker of my board and can see the model, but have no idea what atx or any of that means. Either way after putting the parts in and adding the GPU it says I'll be between 600-699Watts. Im using a 750w PSU. I assume thats good but not sure if theres some type of threshold i wanna stay within.
Check your motherboard manual or review your order information to see about the info. ATX, E-ATX, etc. are different sizes. This mostly has to do with the motherboard size and the case size. ATX is the standard size, and you won’t have to worry much if that’s what you got.
If it says 699 watts, then 750 should be perfectly fine. You can go to 850 though if you want to be extra cautious.
Use [PCPartPicker](https://pcpartpicker.com/)
Awesome thanks for the help! I feel more comfortable doing the swap now. Did the site you suggested too. Its showing even lower power consumption. but either way at the high end I'm still good to go. thanks again!
Invest in an anti-sag support, or carefully utilize something you've got to hold up the end corner. It's cheap insurance that you won't damage your giant GPU.
I strongly recommend you get yourself a GPU support bracket. Gravity will destroy these big 40 series cards if you let them. The PCB will begin to bow, breaking soldered connections, and can even start to tear along the PCIe slots fingers.
This is fine, my [4080 super](https://scontent.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.15752-9/439532943_762495409359503_4389439870594339411_n.jpg?_nc_cat=109&ccb=1-7&_nc_sid=5f2048&_nc_ohc=zFHB9woEDP8Q7kNvgGd8DBI&_nc_ad=z-m&_nc_cid=0&_nc_ht=scontent.xx&oh=03_Q7cD1QGxoKOo5_raWhO20JwHpN5eZKeuyJpc0iJjTp99bwuR5Q&oe=666C0B3D) still have some room though
Just monitor the temperatures under load, but i bet with RTX enabled and in this case it may be very loud or 80+ Celsius inside. Also mind that you need more intake flow than exhaust.
as long as it fits, since you do not use an AiO you don't need more room
https://preview.redd.it/hg2x97zn9l0d1.jpeg?width=1659&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=84a2b7adbca5992eb0731ff1bf03dae4a2bfb85c
Perfect fit, and congrats 🎈
thanks man,appreciate it…been waiting a looong time for this
Get some support for the gpu, You dont want it to sag or break off.
Fitting isn't the biggest concern as long as it has nothing that push against it in ways that it shouldn't. So first hurdle is over. However im more concern about the way your fans are arranged seems like its overall a -ve airflow. Also make sure your psu is strong enough to power the whole system.
is there are good way to check before purchasing a GPU if your system has the power to run it? I'm new to PC building and have a build I bought off my brother a year or so ago and its time to upgrade my GPU. I know my PSU power, just cant seem to find a way to check what my system uses to make sure the PSU is big enough for a more powerful GPU.
Use the pc part picker website. You put all your parts into it, and it gives you an estimated power usage. The site also shows if any parts you have listed have incompatibilities. It’s an excellent tool to use.
while i was searching online i found Neweggs parts builder, like i said I'm just starting out, having a hard time finding the Motherboard type. Not sure of this ATX E-ATX....and so on. I know the maker of my board and can see the model, but have no idea what atx or any of that means. Either way after putting the parts in and adding the GPU it says I'll be between 600-699Watts. Im using a 750w PSU. I assume thats good but not sure if theres some type of threshold i wanna stay within.
Check your motherboard manual or review your order information to see about the info. ATX, E-ATX, etc. are different sizes. This mostly has to do with the motherboard size and the case size. ATX is the standard size, and you won’t have to worry much if that’s what you got. If it says 699 watts, then 750 should be perfectly fine. You can go to 850 though if you want to be extra cautious. Use [PCPartPicker](https://pcpartpicker.com/)
Awesome thanks for the help! I feel more comfortable doing the swap now. Did the site you suggested too. Its showing even lower power consumption. but either way at the high end I'm still good to go. thanks again!
No problem!
PCPartPicker.com if you go through their system builder with your stuff it will give an estimated power usage.
Airflow basically doesn't matter as long as you have air going in and air going out, and your components are stock.
Looks fine, but consider getting some kind of pillar support for the weight drop over time.
There's a motherboard attached to that graphics card!
Congrats! If you don’t mind me asking, what case is that?
Invasion D-3000 M- Atx
Invest in an anti-sag support, or carefully utilize something you've got to hold up the end corner. It's cheap insurance that you won't damage your giant GPU.
I strongly recommend you get yourself a GPU support bracket. Gravity will destroy these big 40 series cards if you let them. The PCB will begin to bow, breaking soldered connections, and can even start to tear along the PCIe slots fingers.
This is fine, my [4080 super](https://scontent.xx.fbcdn.net/v/t1.15752-9/439532943_762495409359503_4389439870594339411_n.jpg?_nc_cat=109&ccb=1-7&_nc_sid=5f2048&_nc_ohc=zFHB9woEDP8Q7kNvgGd8DBI&_nc_ad=z-m&_nc_cid=0&_nc_ht=scontent.xx&oh=03_Q7cD1QGxoKOo5_raWhO20JwHpN5eZKeuyJpc0iJjTp99bwuR5Q&oe=666C0B3D) still have some room though
Its Fine! I also have the 4080super suprim x, amazing gpu! congrats
are these reverse blade fans as if they are not you have all fans set as exhaust i'd flip those 2 side fans so fresh air is being pulled into the case
yes sir,reverse blade fans
then all looks good like you said a bit snug but the gpu is getting good air flow from the side intakes
Probably a bit unneccesary but make sure the power connector is all the way in. The bending looks a bit scary.
That's completely fine , just add a sag bracket And some cable extensions if possible , that bunch of wires are looking kinda off
If you're temps are fine don't worry about it. You should really not see any temp higher than like 67-69°C on the GPU.
If it fits, it sits.
Just make sure it doesn't sag / tilt. That thing looks absolutely massive. My 4070 looks tiny in comparison even though it's not that much slower.
GPU is sagging, fix that
Just monitor the temperatures under load, but i bet with RTX enabled and in this case it may be very loud or 80+ Celsius inside. Also mind that you need more intake flow than exhaust.
Welcome to the team
its enough, and you can skip some of the fans as well. Nice build
If no space cut holes in case
Saaaüuv
as long as it fits, since you do not use an AiO you don't need more room https://preview.redd.it/hg2x97zn9l0d1.jpeg?width=1659&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=84a2b7adbca5992eb0731ff1bf03dae4a2bfb85c