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Hi Folks:
In browsing new computers of various brands I see some offered with 2 and even 3 video cards.
1. How does that work?
2. Is it advantageous to Trainz?
Thanks,
Ben
Hold off a few months, AMD have changed the video card market with a different type of memory access, nVidia are expected to have something very similar out shortly so the top of the line video cards willIt better, lol.
Like I said a major $$$ outlay but what the heck - its all I do. No longer have a model railroad. Tore it out since we are moving. Took 15 years to build but only 2 weeks to dismantle (bummer of the first magnitude).
Other options are:
Intel i7-5960X 8-core processor overclocked to 4.0 Ghz.
32 Gb RAM
32 inch ultra HD monitor
Two 500Gb SSD's in the 2-drive RAID configuration.
Two 6-Tb SATA hard drives for storage.
1500 watt power supply.
The usual odds-n-ends.
Total is around $10,000 (told ya I was crazy).:hehe:
Ben
This is not gonna happen until around Christmas time or a little after the new years so I have some time to look around and see what new alternatives might be offered between now and then.
As you can guess this is offered in several versions with each version having oodles, heaps, and gobs of choices for this-n-that. I tend to buy the top of the line mode and in this case it is only offered with triple video cards. Ditto Ultra HD monitors (32 inch in my case)
What the heck - its only money and ya can't take it with you - (Government won't let you). :hehe:
Ben
Ben. The latest Alienware rigs have just been announced today, with the X51 desktop versions now sporting Skylake processors and optional liquid cooling.
http://www.cnet.com/products/alienware-x51-2015/
NVidia's roadmap shows some intriguingly re-vamped Pascal cards which should become available in 2016. These will also feature the High Bandwidth Memory that AMD is dining out on with its current top of the line cards.
Cool news is that in the Q&A area, N3V have confirmed that they will indeed eventually provide future support for multi-GPU Crossfire and SLI rigs.
Hi John:
I don't think that is the same model as I'm going to buy - the one I want already has liquid cooling.
As for leakage - I have a 5 year old Alienware Aurora Tower which at the time was the top of the line model. Its liquid cooled and I've never had a single drop of problems with it. Cooling is all controlled by the computer itself using several fans with variable speed, the coolant pump is also variable speed, and it has computer controlled vents as well. Temps are monitored here and there and I've never seen any over about 85 degrees F however - these are not microprocessor or video card temps.
In other threads I've seen folks able to monitor actual processor and video card temps (and get some frightening results with T:ANE). Is this something built into a computer? If not does it take a downloadable program to monitor those?
NEW SUBJECT
Ads often say "overclocked to (4.0 Ghz with turbo-boost") for example. I worked in electronics all my life so know all about Hertz (which were CPS when I started, lol). My question is when they say that does it mean the computer comes setup for 4.0 Ghz or can be setup for it with the proper software?
Thanks,
Ben
Hi (another) John:
I dug out the original order form I got with my Aurora. It has an Intel Core i7 960 (3.2 GHz, 8Mb Cache). Yup - that's quite out of date today I'm sure - 5 years makes a heck of a lot of difference hardware wise - but would it have come with turbo-boost?
Yes - I've been following the heat issue with T:ANE in other threads. Sounds like better systems monitor temps and reduce clock speed to protect the hardware when necessary. Might tick some folks off when it happens but that's a lot better then a fried CPU or GPU I'd think.
As you gents can surmise I'm just trying to gather info here and there so I can make a better decision when the time comes. The last computer I really understood was a Commodore C-128 and that's not gonna help me much here.:hehe:
Ben