@@jillianangell2570 thanks for the advice and support. 1650S is my goal. I've done a ton of research and thats the best bang for the buck in my sich. Just refuse to pay full retail plus on used items. I'll wait until they come back in stock.
Timestamps for the things discussed in this video. 1:53 - (Not) Setting your PCs on Carpets. 4:47 - Side Panels and Vertical GPU Mount. 8:20 - NOT Researching the Case before buying. 11:45 - Software Bloating/optimization. 14:38 - Hardware Mismatch. 18:53 - Honorable mention - RAM SLOTS. Happy to help :)
1) Do not work on your computer hardware while its plugged in. 2) Learn what directions your fans blow and tripple check your installation. 3) Update your drivers and windows before you start installing any games or apps.
What I am confused by is how someone can _not_ know which way a fan blows. Computer fans almost always blow from the front to the back. If you're not sure, just look at which way it spins.
@Rondo James your going to want a cooling mat. Laptops are designed to get hot. If your gaming or doing long hours on your laptop, try plugging in a dedicated keyboard and mouse, and keep your laptop on a cooling mat so you don’t feel the heat.
me who tired putting more then one screw in my fan, figured out that tension was stopping it, so now my cpu fan is held in by one screw and you can hear it tapping. on a 2000dollar pc..... i hate that stupied fan i tired putting it on before i put the rad in, i tired after, i did everything in the end it just has a single screw but i have two fans instead of one. and i wiggled it and it didn;t have too much play so i should be fine....
Also screw them in a little at a time. Do you best to keep the pressure equal. It is very easy to crack any kind of board by not screwing them in properly.
I second a few things here; 1: Don't cheap out on the power supply (Melted a few drives that way) 2: Use "custom install" for applications to make sure they aren't adding bloat/spyware.
When I posted a list of parts I would buy and asked for input, the no-name PSU was the #1 item people pointed out. If the power isn't clean, the motherboard and drives will have to deal with it and while motherboards can certainly do that, they'll age faster. And if you ever have stability issues and ask for help, you'll be hung up forever with people asking you to try a higher quality PSU first.
@@_Cookie_Warrior_ so it's not that they're potentially inexpensive (cheap). You can do your research and maybe find a good one from a no name brand that makes them in the same factory as the big boys.. but if you're not dedicated to finding out everything about it, you should stick to a good brand that has a valid warranty. Who knows if that cheap company named Zxeii PSU xyz will really be around to honor their 3-5 year "warranty".
@@_Cookie_Warrior_ There's a couple of points to hit on here and some misconceptions. Usually you can trust certian brands, but sometimes even "good" brands they can let you down (one of the most infamous is the Thermaltake TR2 series) and interestingly, around a year or so ago a bunch of last-generation high-end PSUs had major flaws depending on use case (remember, people often buy these for peace of mind). The ones that I can remember off the top of my head is some Seasonic Focus Gold/Focus Plus Gold (and PSUs, like some Antec units based of them), EVGA SuperNova G3 and some other Superflower Leadex based units, as well as some Silverstone SFX units. These require a very certain condition to cause issues, but is still not acceptable considering how much these costed. But to answer your question, there are 3 main reasons why cheap PSUs aren't good. The AC to DC conversion in switching power supplies isn't perfect, which leads to ripple. High ripple can create problems ranging from system instability (especially when overclocking) to shortening the lifespan of your components (lf all you ever ate was Burger King for your entire life, you would be dead sooner then if you stuck to a normal dietary pattern). On some units, another issue can be cooling. Many of these cheaper PSUs rely on a 80mm fan at the back, and even worse, the heatsinks inside these are often very anemic compared to decent units, so there's a good chance that something could catch on fire inside the PSU, Which leeds to another combination of issues. The fact that these cheap units are often rated above the amount of power they can actually deliver. Oftentimes, a 500W PSU may be a rebranded 300W PSU, or even in one case were I have seen a 1600W PSU actually be one of the 550W Thermaltake TR2 power supplies that I touched on earlier. On a decent design, this wouldn't be a monumental issue (it would still be an issue to see your 500W PSU not working when putting a 350W load on it, though) but with these cheap designs, they often do not have any or very rudimentary protective circuitry. A good design would normally shut down when you put too excessive of a load on it, or if the internal components of the PSU run too hot, but this is not the case for some of the cheapo units. Even if a power supply running above it's spec will often send very high levels of ripple to your components (if it wasn't high enough on some units) and then there's the potentiality of something getting too hot, a fire starting, causing capacitors to explode, and ultimately leading to the death of components inside your PC. Sorry for the giant ramble. I'm writing this at 4AM and I really should be getting to bed soon.
@@johannesvalentino1650 If you put it onto the motherboard you'll either have the very bad integrated graphics which can barely handle a game unless it's old or you'll have a black monitor screen if you have no onboard graphics.
@@epochseven4197 no you don't most of the time. The GPU can still output video without dedicated drivers. It happened to me for building my new pc. My CPU has no onboard graphics so when building, I plugged hdmi into the GPU. First but no probs
@@ararix3722 Combo of superstition and common sense. I learned this from a friend/colleague building PCs in the days of white boxes with little to no fans, bare-metal interiors, disk drives, cd-drives, Molex power cables, and ribbon-type data cables. If you screw in the side panel, more likely than not you're going to have to take it off again to fix a cable, re-seat the ram, fix the case wires on the MB, etc.) The superstition part is because you screwed in the side panel, it's not going to work and you'll need to take off the panel to fix something.
That's why I always put it 100% back together and then put away all the supplies/tools in storage. Then I do a christening ritual. That way I can force the looming problems to the forefront.
@@somebodyelseathome I normally only screw the panel back on once I see the computer is up and running. Only because I've had to take it back off to fix my ram (I didn't get the ram in correctly). It was just a bit of a pain having to take it off again.
Interestingly enough, a lot of prebuilts in my place use this even though it seems like a decent build I mean they have a good motherboard, gpus and stuff but the psu is suspiciously cheap and for a newbie that don't bother with such stuff could be tricked with it and bought a system that rigged to blow off after some time
Take it from someone who has had 5 psu's blow up that were cheap (and one that wasn't no idea what happened there) when your psu blows it WILL take something with it end of discussion it WILL kill SOMETHING. Now you might be in a situation where after replacing the psu everything works just fine but this is borrowed time...your hard drive your gpu your motherboard SOMETHING is on its way out and it is living on borrowed time. also sadly plus80 cert is no longer a good measure of a "good" psu alot of cheap chinesium psu's pass 80plus and are just as bad as the ones that aren't best stick to corsair thermaltake bequiet! coolermaster and evga (might be 1 or 2 i missed there) generally speaking if it is one of those you have nothing to worry about
Cost shouldn't be the factor. The PSU in my build I'm about to retire after 10 years was cheaper than many others on the market at the time and had lower wattage than the others. It was a Corsair and I'd read a lot of reviews at the time. But bigger wattage and price isn't better and the smart choice of a PSU should take into account reviews, but also what your build will need. People should do their research.
Only got Avast on startup, can't disable it anyways. I did have PowerToys on startup as well but PowerToys Run was giving me issues. I still don't understand how I'm using half of my 8GB of RAM with just Task Manager open.
@@ExperiencersInternational just get rid of avast, as jay said, windows defender is good enough these days. i had to get rid of avast when windows 10 was still in beta and only missed it for about a week.
Aesthetics is definitely taking priority in a lot of pre-built gaming PCs. My husband bought my son one for Christmas. When it arrived I couldn't see any intake fans. Come to find out the intake fans were in the front completely blocked by the LED front panel. The only way they were getting any air was from a very small slit on the side. I ended up removing the plastic LED front panel and placing a mesh one over it to allow the fans to actually get air. I guess I should at least be glad the fans were set to intake as I had another family member buy one where all of the fans were set to exhaust. The computer kept shutting down because it was overheating due to no air intake.
If you don't need a silent PC then don't buy one that prioritizes running quietly using a visually appealing design. It depends on the build, but the tradeoff can have little to no effect on performance and an acceptable increase in temperature. They also do well in high-dust environments or serve as part of a low-maintenance build. It's not just about aesthetics and judging from where people stick their PCs, airflow isn't at the top of their list when making a purchase. Pre-builts cater to a target market.
2 дня назад
Asthetic is the priority because it's a scam. They sell shit PCs but put them inside shiny rgb cases so someone who doesn't understand about PCs buys it thinking it must be good because it looks so cool.
My "don't do this when building a computer" would totally be "don't buy a cheap non brand psu". This is very common and can lead to a disaster when you least expect it.
cough, do your research.. and that goes for prebuilt oem stuff as well because some of them might actually have decent psu's in them, they're just rebranded. years and years ago HP was using the same PSU's as BFG(RIP) just under the branding of the factory that was producing them. some of the OEM builders still do that today and it's easy enough to check it assuming what ever your replacing still uses less then the maximum output of the psu.
Yes. Even if your budget is very tight. Compromise with a weaker CPU, less RAM, or even a flimsy junk case, even go without a case vs use any PSU that isn't specifically highly rated by someone who does that as their profession.
Also, don't go overkill on the PSU. Remember, you don't need a damn 1,000w PSU if you are just running a bare basic setup. My personal R5 build has the same 600w that I was using since bulldozer days.
Right ??? Because Brand name PSU's always use Brand name parts right.. Like Nichicon and Rubicon caps LOL as if . No, i think if you open a brand name / "GAMING" PSU you'll find a Leylon capacitor the same as you would in a generic but i've also found, there is generic and there is SHIT GENERIC Generic , they have Leylon caps Shit Generic, Sanhua and your high end PSU's are going to have the same at the end of the day , Volts x Amps = Watts and the volts or the amps or the Watts ARE NOT BRAND DEPENDANT electricity doesn't give a fuck about your brand it just cares about conductivity and reliability of components Now.. if you can show me that your PSU has Ruby caps and ... on top of that that it's well designed and ALL THE COMPONENTS ARE HIGH QUALITY then... I will stand corrected but.. i've never seen that and i repair SMPS's (Switch Mode Power supplies) all the time i agree with your credo, for the record, ONLY IF WHAT YOU DEEM GOOD IS USING QUALITY COMPONENTS but.. it's not
YUP! building a FreeBSD server, totally forgot to do that. Also, RAM is bad, put it in as manual instructed, doesn't work. All old parts, project shelved for now. Need DDR3 RAM, don't feel like finding it at this time.
I agree with this one with one small asterisk. For some Ryzen MoBos, because of multiple gen support, they will appear in Part Picker with a warning that they are not compatible. For example, a B450 with a Ryzen 3000 series. Sometimes the software will be right and you need a BIOS upgrade, sometimes it has a BIOS flash upgrade option, sometimes you need a previous CPU, sometimes it already comes with the up to date BIOS. Always check they supported CPUs on the MoBo support page
@@deloreigames8641 OMFG GOD DUDE literally built a pc last week and did exactly what you said this is literally insane. But yeah it was a pain in the ass cuz it took me a while to figure out the problem
Some of the warnings to do with BIOS are just wrong and dont apply. My friend and I had the same warning, as we have similar parts, and it affected neither of us in any noticeable way.
Having been a bench tech in my early years, one of my never dos to your computer is never torque the screws that secure the motherboard to the case to 175 foot pounds. Can't tell you the number of times I've run into systems where someone thought that fasteners securing PC components needed to have the same torque as the head bolts on an engine.
Always click "custom installation" rather than going with "recommended" so you can see everything that's going to be installed and you can deselect components that you don't require.
I've seen browser windows with like 2/3 of the height filled with toolbars because of this. Another very important thing is disable the windows explorer setting that hides the file extension - that being default is the main reason for PCs getting infested by viruses in conjunction with a user that doesn't recognize things as executables. It's literally Microsoft's fault.
If you're building for the first time make sure to use the risers! I had taken apart dozens of systems by the time I built my own from scratch and yet I didn't think about those little posts that the motherboard screws went into and I installed the board directly into the case and had it grounding out against said case! I was very lucky that my hardware all survived this debacle of an oopsie because I could have easily caused any number of parts to short out and die permanently.
@@nehemiahledwidge9131 I believe the correct term is called: "Motherboard Standoffs". They hold the motherboard up, off the case's motherboard tray. They look like they are made of brass.
@@nehemiahledwidge9131 I used the wrong word I meant standoffs, the little posts that screw into the case and then the motherboard sits on top of them and the screws go into them to mount the board. They keep the contacts on the back of the board from touching the case and grounding/shorting out.
I watched this and was dissapointed. It isn't a professional video but based on what everyone says about it, I expected blunders such as putting the termal paste on the bottom of the CPU rather than the top - but no, just a few misconceptions and poor thermal paste application.
@King James If you can't find a swiss knife try to look for a friend named Phillip he might be able to help you out with some head. Oof that joke was so bad I even aknowledged it myself while typing.
I just built my first PC and i dont have a specific rule, but just a bit of sharing with my experience. PC part picker was my best friend. It helped me find compatible parts with the items i already knew i wanted. The next part, the build process. Guides on pc building are phenomenal! And also took me 6 hours to have everything put together leading me to say do not rush yourself especially if its your first build. When youve put it all together of course make sure to turn it on and make sure it works, but my best advice is to clean up the inside panel wire wise where all your components are, but only do that. Give yourself a day or 2 for a little time inbetween before you work on your wire management in the back. Having that time inbetween helps with recollecting yourself after the stress of putting it together. And the last bit of advice i can give which happened to me is after youve updated your BIOS on your motherboard if you get a blue screen when trying to install your operating system do not panic. Start by resetting your bios on your motherboard and then try installing your operating software. I spent 4 hours trying to figure out what was wrong and was afraid i damaged something in my build process but it was just a bad bios update. If you still get a bluescreen it is now time to PANIC!!!
Just finished my first build getting ready to post as completed on pcpartpicker: Highlyregarded LTT’s last pc build guide is 1:30:0 OP. used as a build order template to avoid logical mistakes and cover of alit if errors before you make them. I n my case moments before.
My number one tip is not feel pressured about building one at all. Many just want an computer and you can be saved a lot of headache by just buying a system made already. To the inexperienced there really isn't any advantage to doing it yourself. I'd only tell people they should if they want to.
@Narax pre-built PCs are often poor quality plus building a basic system with aircooling or even AOI doesn't require that much knowledge, some ikea furniture can be harder to build.
@@mohammeded-dahbi7603 No, wrong. They are not often of poor quality, poor quality computers are always of poor quality. You can't use the worst as a reflection of the whole. Just because the cheapest hammers are terrible doesn't make all hammers terrible. It was sound advice a decade or two ago but now a days there are plenty of decent system builders. Also, building a computer is not easy. Sure putting the parts together is easy but it is finding the parts that is rather difficult. To someone that doesn't have the knowledge already it isn't clear or even remotely obvious at all what is worth buying. There are a lot of things you take for granted and presume they are simple just because you understand them but these things are not simple and can take a lot of time to understand. The only advantage to building the computer yourself is that you get the flexibility to choose the parts you want. A person who is ignorant will not be able to make the most if anything out of this advantage and many good PC building services now a days let you pick the parts if you wanted.
@@SirNarax On the other hand, nowadays you also have plenty of services to help you pick the parts(pcpartpicker and newegg among many) and loads of easy to follow tutorials free on youtube, so there's really no reason not to do it at all and plenty of advantages apart from choosing the parts like being able to do maintenance and part replacement by yourself and also by understanding what goes in your pc and how it works in general allows the userto treat it in a way that will increase it's lifespan (a simple example would be not putting the pc on a carpet or in a cabinet).
@@mohammeded-dahbi7603 Just because there are resources to educate you doesn't make it any easier to learn. It is still a massive hurdle and the hurdle to buying a computer yourself is always going to be infinitely lower. And if you are just going to copy someone else's build why not just you know, buy the computer built? Which will save you the time, isn't that much more expensive if at all and you won't have to worry about doing it wrong. Also being able to do maintenance yourself isn't a pro and isn't mutually exclusive. You can maintain a pre-made machine they are made out of the same components if you wanted to maintain it yourself. But many of these companies also provide to you that service. For many, working on a computer is not a pleasurable experience. "Do it yourself" is terrible advice now a days.
Jay, as a european I have NEVER wondered why "there is so much carpet" in your houses. My own room has carpet floor. We are wondering why the heck you build your houses out of cardboard and that's basically it.
here's your answer, from a fellow european: most of the us has a much higher chance of being hit by a natural disaster than most of europe, stone houses would still break, but be more expensive to rebuild. added bonus: their way of doing framing and drywall on top makes it super easy to retrofit ethernet or rerun the electricity wiring.
I could not imagine having a stone slab/concrete flooring for my house. Holy hell, would it be hard to heat. All that stone just sucking the cold in from outside/the basement, and pumping it into the house...jeez. I also couldn't imagine waking up in the morning, and making my zombie walk to the bathroom on a cold, immovable slab. Wood floors give, and carpet over a wood floor feels nice when you walk on it. Even a wood floor feels pretty nice to walk on barefoot or in socks. It would hurt so bad to walk around in a house with concrete or stone floors. Our kitchens and bathrooms mostly have linoleum flooring, too, especially if you rent...only people with money can afford tiled floors, and even then, only bathrooms and kitchens have tile. Nobody tiles the rest of their house, they use wood and/or carpet for comfort. As for the comments about construction, yes, we use wood because of the cost and ease of construction. You can also build entire walls and most of the structure of the house in a wood shop, and ship the walls to wherever the house is being built. And even if you have to build everything on site, you can be digging on a Wednesday and putting the shingles on the roof on a Wednesday two weeks later. They're extremely easy and fast to build.
@@nickpickerwi7787 Most people have carpet on their concrete and or wooden flooring over the concrete. Also, if you're rich you can get floor heating. Some places which I visite fairly often have that and its amazing if you're walking on socks/bare feet.
About the RAM slots thing, definitely carefully read your motherboard's manual. There is no standardized way of arranging the DIMMs. For the longest time, I thought it was always "every other slot" for dual channel, but my current motherboard has the channels alternating between each slot (though they did nicely color code them), meaning 2 sticks among 4 slots actually should go right next to each other in this board in order to get dual channel performance.
I built my first PC the other day... Did a very extensive research even down to the type of mobo models and all that stuff. The "studying" part took me days and dozens of videos about each PC parts. I'm just really proud and I wanted to share it with y'all! I've been using laptops for more than a decade now so it's a pretty big step up! Now watching videos on good practices!
A few things I've learned to avoid over my years of building computers: 1. Don't overclock anything until you've tested and can confirm that the hardware functions properly at factory settings. 2. Don't spend money on good/expensive cooling unless you plan to achieve a significant overclock. 3. Don't assume you've discovered the problem until you've thoroughly tested every component that has a role in how it functions, regardless of how little. 4. Don't take the word of a tech centre as the gospel truth. Professional troubleshooters can still make mistakes and misdiagnose the problem.
Any advice to test every component? My PC shuts off when I play very heavy games, I’ve ran benchmarks for my cpu and gpu both at the same time, I’ve tested my ram, I’ve used a psu tester, there’s not much more I can do is there?
@H C check your CPU and GPU temps under load. If it is failing during heavy gaming depending on the game it could be a PC part getting so hot it shuts down the system. If its CPU check that the CPU cooler is mounted properly and the thermal paste applied. If GPU overheating then you will want to look at case cooling. Check fans directions so it moves hot air out of the system or add a few more fans. You shouldn't need more then 3-4 decent fans on a case if it is set up properly. Depending on case having the fans or two at the front pushing air over the system whilst the ones at the back or back and top pull out the hot air is generally a pretty safe bet from my experience.
dont use a cheap undersized power cable (the one from the wall to psu) if you have a high power PSU (1000W+) if this cable is too thin it can overheat and possibly catch fire. not terribly common, but there are very cheaply made versions of these cables available
@@moofey It's not to do with dust, it's the fact that carpets can have static electricity build up in them, which is obviously not good for your PC if your computer is sitting on a carpet.
Im 37 and built my first PC just by watching your vids for fun during here at the shipyard. Last time I owned a PC was in 2010. Thanks for sparking up a joy I had lost man.
Good for you man. I have the same story. I was 30 and working in a heavy equipment warehouse. I built a gaming pc and a buddy of mine said I should apply for a help desk job at the corporation he worked at. I played on computers as a kid, but hadn't really worked on them in 15 years. Here I am 5 years later, and I'm a sysadmin, and it all started with gaming and watching these kinds of videos
@@grizzlycmmg9578 shii me too, 19 n built a pc, only thing is that it still feels that I’m playin on my ps4 still except with 1440p. Don’t know the reason why my monitor or 3080 ti gpu can’t show the frames on the monitor
@@juaquiqui-kun4333 if you press alt z --> settings --> hud layout --> performace --> then just click fps and decide which corner you would like fps to appear. I prefer using steam (if you play your games on steam) for my fps layout it looks more clean and feels more accurate. Just click settings on the top left corner of steam --> click in-game --> In-game FPS counter, then just decide what corner you would like it on. I also prefer checking the High contrast color box. That's subjective tho haha. Hope that helped
Don't watch the Verge But honestly, just like Jay said, research, research, research. Try your best to find out the best parts for your particular budget, including peripherals. You don't need a 4k 144Hz monitor if you're getting like a $1k system. Another point is that PSU, do not ever ever cheap out on it. You can get a budget psu, but don't ever switch your psu for a worse one just so you can get that better cpu. Chances are the better your parts are you'd want a better psu, for more power/efficiency.
i second this. i bought a 144hz 1440p monitor. now i have to spend a shitload to get good frames in 1440p. but ya know. it is what it is. Still love the monitor though
Yeah I'm definitely experiencing this right now. Bought a pc second hand and not knowing the psu I upgraded the gpu and doubled my ram and constantly have to lower settings so I don't blow everything up. Gonna get a 650w gold psu here soon
For new PC builders they a common thing they try and correlate is PSU rating = Quality Which of course leads to them thinking low priced ones are “bombs”
Nightey3s I concur with Jay as well about researching the build as by doing so you can avoid pitfalls were the motherboard i/o placements doesn't work with the case you've bought. Admittedly that's less of an issue now due to standardisation and cable management being a required feature as opposed to a luxury. However many cheap cases don't have such basic features. Not to mention, they may have very short front i/o cables too. The best places to find information is the motherboard manuals and case manuals. The latter is hard to find for cheap cases that get re-branded and sold.
As a new builder and gathering parts over a few months for a big build...id say, dont cuddle every night with the parts you have so far because you are insanely excited. Or at least, if you do, leave them in the anti-gov-infil wrap! Always wear protection when getting intimate with your pc parts. 🤘 love you guys, thank you for all your hard work and information.
Three rules: 1) Never buy a cheap psu from an unknown brand. 2) Never buy a cheap motherboard, most of the time it doesn't support certain xmp profiles or further upgrade in the cpu list. 3) even when you buy good parts check specs and reviews, sometime to similar products from known brands can have totally different standards
Well, I can agree with the first rule. it is not an unknown brand but I got it for free with my video card. you guessed it: gigabyte P850GM. I put this PSU in my pc but nothing happened. the psu just made a ticking noise. i had talked to some friends, i found out that this PSU is bad. luckily nothing happened. these are now being sold for €50/€60. I don't know if the problem with this psu has been solved yet, but I recommend that you buy a good PSU and do your research!
4) Never buy a used motherboard advertised as having "only one small fault" - I found out the downside of this recently. 5) Never buy overspecced components compared to what you need.
My friend had 5 different anti-virus programs on his pc. They were all fighting against each other when he tried to stick in an usb storage the system was like yes no yes no yes no yes no yes no😂😂😂😂
My top worst things you can do: 1. Sticking with a single brand because of brand loyalty 2. Not spending the time to do proper research 3. Not exploring all options first (kinda goes hand in hand with two)
That's a good point about brands. I have my preferences but they're not locked down. Things change over the years and the best quality at the best price doesn't necessarily stay the same so you have to be open to new things. I used to be a Corsair PSU fanboy but now I'm running 2 EVGAs and they're freakin sweet. Used to prefer Gigabyte mobos but now I'm running 3 different brands. Same with Intel and AMD. Only thing I've stuck with over the years is Gskill RAM, and I now stick to Nvidia gpus (except APUs) because I like their drivers better but that could always change (eventually).
I wanna add something to sticking to one brand. It might not have anything to do with brand loyalty but if you like RGB and you then buy parts with lights in them it could be in your best interest to buy same brand parts that then use the same lighting software so you're not dealing with 3 or 4 different RGB softwares all at once.
it doesn't matter how much time you spend doing proper research if that research is a lie. Whenever a good part comes out, everyone is going to lie about it so it doesn't sell. They will tell you to run memtest86 which is a completely placebo program specifically built to make you think your RAM is working, so they can blame your expensive GPU instead. Then when you replace your RAM and all your issues are fixed, and you prove to everyone that your GPU is fine, they block you. The best way to build a PC is by gut feeling, because your gut feeling will not lie to you or provide you fake benchmark scores, fake 1 star reviews, and fake TDP.
@@milesfarber memtest is a really useful app if you know what you're doing. Most people "researching" aren't reading reviews but looking at specs like supported memory, how the mobo pcie lanes are shared, V core et al. It sounds like you are pretty new to computers so it would be worth learning the vernacular so as you can research a build's potential yourself using the data sheets rather than relying on reviews to tell you how well they perform.
@@supersimon126 I agree with that, but that kind of doesn't apply to my statement, because that's not about brand loyalty, but rather RGB compatibility/consistency. Great point.
If you’re a first time builder don’t neglect the user manuals that come with some of your components! Also don’t be lazy lol building a computer is as much about research as it is about building!
Also make a list of what your computer is going to be used for (office, gaming, video / music / photo editing, etc.) and base the components on that list. It'll help out a great deal when it comes to cost (and keeping technolust under control).
I’m just gonna buy a pre built. I understand PCs and components, however I am too lazy to bother. Components are too pricey right now as it is. I’d rather deal with one company’s return policy over multiple if any parts go defective.
This is what I like about listening to Jay. You can tell he is definitely experienced in his 30 years of building computers. In my eyes I'll call him a master of his trade. Anyways the things he talks about are really important. What I am about to say can apply to almost any other thing in life too: sometimes the very little details are overlooked in certain aspects that we may would or wouldn't believe to have a significant impact. Jay's analogy that he uses with cars is a really good example of this too. Some people may not know that if you get an engine that guzzle's gas, you don't want a weak carbeurator or fuel pump to cause the engine to starve out. Vice versa you don't want a fuel pump and carb that delivers lots of gas into a small engine, or else you'll drown it. Anyways what's important is that when we get into expensive hobbies we want to avoid wasting money :P
"If it doesn't seem to fit, don't force it." 🙂 When building a pc with a friend, early 2000's, he managed to get a DDR stick to lock in upside down. (We were building it inside the case.) As we turned the PC on for the first time we got a big spark, and then the motherboard was dead.
I did that when I was something like 8yo but when I realized the issue (since nothing booted of course) I just placed them back around and everything was fine afterwards
My pc had 2 rams. One malfunctioned so a friend debugged and removed the ram. System started running. As soon as he went home I inserted the other ram again in running system. It burned the motherboard.
As someone who's buying and assembling their first non-prebuilt computer, this video was a gold mine. Thank you so much Jay for being so helpful/practical/down-to-earth. It means a lot to a newbie like me. Your experience and communication skills are invaluable!
Be sure to use standoffs under every screw hole on the motherboard. I have seen too many motherboards where only the corners were screwed down or only the six screws closest to the IO ports & PCIe slots and no standoffs behind the three holes toward the front of the case were used. More often than not, there were no standoffs under the DIMM slots. Even the plastic ones will work if nothing else. The best thing to use is a standoff for every screw hole--oh, and don't forget to put a screw in each standoff!
@@slip9637 Because if you don't use standoffs, the board can crack or break, also, the board can short out (the SMTs, etc. extend out the back of the board) on the case.
If you look at the solder around the mounting holes in a motherboard, you may realize: They're Electrically Grounding the Circuits. You can thank me, later...🇺🇸 😎👍☕
@Esteb5n Caballero people who buy anything really(graphics card, concert tickets, phones, etc) and resell them to the general public at a much higher price(about 2-3x more, depending on the industry you're in)
@@zerohunterx5 Not necessarily. If the computer is overheating it has fail safes, like throttling performance to cool the chipset and CPU. What load was your computer experiencing? If you where doing demanding tasks, or many tasks, this is to be expected. What was the temperature in the room that your computer was located in? In the summertime, my computer always runs a little louder, because of the higher temperatures. If it only happens every now and again, I wouldn't worry about it. If you want to keep your computer running cool, make sure you clean the interior monthly of dust with compressed air, and make sure there are no major airflow obstructions.
Just finished my build tonight. I installed my components and installed windows with Jays videos. Some things i would say. Take your time,watch plenty of videos and most import read the manuals!
Things to keep in mind! 1) 1:58 Don't set your computer on carpet, why? & recommendations. 2) 4:48 Side panel esthetics discussion, ventilation, GPU mount, improving cooling, airflow etc. 3) 8:24 Not researching the case before you buy, Airflow issues. 4) 11:45 Software importance, OS recommendations, Windows defender over Third-Party Antivirus software Less is more etc. 5) 14:37 Hardware, mismatching hardware, avoiding bundle deals, examples and advice. and do your research on parts! especially new builders. 6) 18:51 Honourable mentions, Ram slots and proper installation of ram slots refer to your motherboard manual, discussion and advice! your welcome!
@@00O3O1B Actually that's not true. While yes, more thermal paste is generally not harmful in any way to your CPU or temps, it is actually possible to apply use waaay too much thermal paste. A friend of mine.... used so much thermal paste one time, that it spewed out the sides (which is generally ok...but) and actually managed to get under the socket and unbelievably onto the pins of the CPU. I'm not shitting you. I'd never seen anything like it. I still don't understand HOW he managed to get it UNDER the socket. But enough of it got under the CPU that it actually covered a couple pins which ended up causing POST to not recognize one of his RAM modules. It took me over an hour to clean up the mess (including socket and CPU pins) and teach him AGAIN how to properly apply thermal paste and reiterate to him, if he's unsure if it's enough paste, there's no problem with adding more, but NO, DO NOT PUT AN ENTIRE TUBE OF PASTE ON ONE CPU! One tube of paste should accommodate multiple CPU installs (At least 5 CPU's, unless you're installing a Threadripper, in which case 2-3 CPU's). Not one CPU. I still have the pictures.
@@valhallasashes4354 That's very possible lol. If you haven't watched The Verge yet, your friend might have found out it was too much if he used a Thermal Applicator. :P lolol
Or if you live in an area with several power cuts a year, use a full UPS. The surge protector didn't stop my wife's motherboard getting fried a few years ago.
My buddy has one of those whole house surge protection systems installed with individual surge protectors protecting his devices. He works from home, so it's a bit essential and piece of mind when you have to deal with pretty intense thunder storms during the summer.
@@adamboise3907 I sell TVs and computers for a living and try get everyone to purchase a surge protector. Personally I don’t see why everyone doesn’t have one. For the cost of them it just doesn’t seem worth the risk of loosing an expensive item.
I like how good of a relationship Jay and Phil have. Really makes it feel like a two man show, not a one man show. ...As for my #1 tip for new builders is not to run hardware that shows signs of problems, even if it works now. This is a rule that has bitten me multiple times for not following it. When I was still a new builder, I had some crappy thermaltake fans that did not last very long. One of them was making a horrendous noise, but I found that moving the wire around caused it to stop. One day I put my computer in sleep mode instead of shutting it down, like an idiot, and proceeded to mess with the wire. After that my computer stopped booting with anything plugged into PCIe slots, so I am pretty sure it shorted out and killed the PCIe controller in my i5 4690k. Thats all in the past now, Im not as stupid as I once was however I had another issue within the past 6 months come up. In my current build, the first psu I used was my old Seasonic s12 650w. That psu was about 5 years old when I started my current build, and after about 6-8 months of usage it began to die on me. Thus, I decided to order a Corsair RM650. The first one I got did not work at all, so I sent it back and got a new one. However, the new one had this weird problem where one of the PCIe power ports on the psu would occasionally decide not to work, forcing me to open up the back panel and reconnect the cable (ironic, huh?). Since I was already upset having to send the first one back, I did not want to send the psu back again for this reason even though I should have. So, another 6 months down the line and that one decided to start faltering as well. This was right when "Borona birus" hit and I was forced to go through Corsair's warrenty stuff before I could get a new one. Took me 3 weeks before I had the replacement, but at least they upped it to an RM750. I'm hoping this is the last time I replace a psu for another 5 years at least. P.S. In the interim, I used an old 1000w Antec psu I bought used a few years back. That old thing still works like a charm, and it helped reassure my sanity that the problem with my PSUs was not stemming from any main components. The damn thing is about 10 years old now. Also, before anyone asks, yes 650w was more than enough for my system. I used multiple websites including psu calculators and pc part picker to validate my configuration.
@@yourhandlehere1 well first you need to make sure that it's over clockable otherwise it can't read the time on your pocket watch. Also it's a common misconception that you put the clock over top of it but over clocking actually means the gpu or cpu is over top of the clock so they can read it better.
Alternatively, learn which parts are intended to conduct electricity and which ones are intended to conduct heat, and that, even though there is some overlap in which materials do those two things, they are not the same.
My first rule: Never leave your PSU plugged in when working on your system!! I, myself, have fried more than one system thinking I flipped the switch in the back and didn't, and WHIRRR!! case fans and lights for a millisecond, then realize the PC won't boot or even power on anymore. Honestly don't see that AS MUCH with today's hardware but it still happens!! A close second: Don't think your heatsink/cooler is "okay without thermal paste." It was appalling how many people back in Socket 436 days said no thermal paste was okay. I learned the hard way, TWICE, that thermal paste is pretty much a requirement , and not. an. option!
NEVER PUT 3 PIN 5V RGB INTO A 4 PIN 12V RGB HEADER. I Daisy chained my fan's RGB (inwin Sirius loop) and connected the single end of a multi purpose (5v-12v) RGB into a 12v because I thought, "Hey, more juice to power all these fans' RGB." Oh boy that was stupid. There was a pop, spark, and then a flame. Flame went out quicker than it took for me to react and now everything works except all my RGB headers. Also: put your budget into performance and get to the looks when the PC is running, don't waste cash on aesthetics right away unless you are able to.
I accidentally dumped a shitton of cranberry juice on my laptop and I think you should make a part 2 to this vid bc i didn’t see anything like that in your guide.
spun my chair around which somehow caused a big beer glass filled with water to tip over onto my laptop, i also fell on the same laptop some year earlier while slipping on ice and the screen didn't make it back then so i had to use my old crt screen. I guess it went through a lot.
@@smievil bruh...i once spilled a whole cup of hot tea on my laptop, I can swear my reaction has never been so good...i literally grabbed my laptop and put it upside down in a splitsecond....so it lived...bet then after a few months I fcking puked on it...and closed it afterwards...was a great surprise in the morning, and it still survived :D
Something I figured out is that synthetic materials tend to have a tendency to accumulate static charges, which I was having a big problem with at work. My roller pad under my chair built up so much charge that conducted into my chair that every time I stood up the discharge would cause my computers audio jacks to react, setting of my theme sounds. Whenever I stood up, the sound of water splashing would occur, completely mystifying me and the engineers I work with. The solution: I put some fabric softener into a spray bottle and treated my plastic roller pad. After that, no more problem. And the whole room had that fresh, spring smell! Which was pretty annoying, but it goes away after a few months. With my new pad, I just treated the bottom of it and that was enough to prevent recurrence.
Don't price out components too far ahead of time. Especially right now, hardware prices fluctuate and you never know when the motherboard you were eyeing rockets in price due to low supply while a more premium one may come down a bit. Be as flexible as you can and find the best value at time of purchase.
Since I try to one stop shop (Micro Center) I usually don't start to price until the day I am going to order and pick it up, I will check out Best Buy at the same time because they are on the way to MC. LOL
I bought a "width adjustable" stand with wheels. It keeps my case off the ground by about 2-3" for like $10. Its very sturdy and easy to move your computer around.
Mine is literally sitting on top of a piece of the packaging one of my furniture pieces came on. It's 4 planks of wood stapled together lmfao, with cardboard on the bottom (for that whole dust part)
I made a whole cabinet for the two computers. I calculated the volume of the computers and the approximate volume of air needed. I added intake, intermediate and exhaust fans and added filters for each fan. I prefer to clean filters more often than whole computers. Although computer maintenance is also required, this is normal. It is important to have a fresh air flow and to clean the filters often.
*Don't forget to open your case several times a year to clean the dust out.* Edit - There has been much debate. I believe the conclusion amoungst the wisest of these noble commenters is. It kinda depends on how much dust the climate you live in has. The ideal range seems to be as little as twice a year, and as often as twice a month. All depending on the dust in your climate.
This is so true! I've had cheapskate power supplies go bad and kill a CPU or RAM stick. A low quality PSU won't have the same voltage stability as a high quality one, or will struggle under high loads, possible leading to early failure or random crashes/reboots. If there is ANY component in your computer that is the most important to not cheap out on, it's the power supply.
@@tzxazrael Power supply is one that people usually assume is alright to cheap out on though. It's important that new builders know how important it is to get a decent one. It doesn't need to be insane, just not bare minimum.
@@Shmozone there's a good chance if your $25 case comes with a power supply, that power supply does not deserve to ever be plugged into a power outlet. Lol
Make sure you know what the correct airflow looks like. Make sure to reapply thermal paste every so often to avoid brackets cracking apart when you examine your pc to fix another issue. Make sure to take care of your pc and watch channels like this to avoid having to build a new one as well as what to do if you end up having to.. Although in my case considering my computer was built at the end of 2015 it was about time for an upgrade anyway.
To my big shame, I took my first "plug&play" sound-card literally. I installed it, booted win95, something wasn't working with the jumpers or what not, so I took out the soundcard WHILE THE SYSTEM WAS RUNNIG. I still ran. I changed some jumpers and plugged it in WHILE THE SYSTEM WAS RUNNING. It wasn't running then. The mainboard never came alive again. Sad nerd noises :(
They have these nice anti-static wristbands you can wear and ground yourself with to reduce static risk. I only use them if the weather is really dry, though, because humidity helps keep static down, too..
Installing AVG antivirus. Between the common popups to the hard to uninstall optional addons, this program has more in common with the malware it is supposedly against.
I don't use anything but window defender, never had an issue to be honest. And I look at porn and go to sketchy places on the web lol. The rare times I did do something stupid a simple re install of windows fixed it.
Pro tip (from a 22 year former PC Tech. myself), that I've seen amateurs fail to do for decades and wonder why they blow video cards etc.. Switch it off at the power supply, unplug it and hit the power button, to discharge the capacitors. There's a second reason not to put PC's on carpets too, ESD. And even though static is not as much of a worry these days, with protected equipment, it's still a good practice to drill into your head concerning any exposed, unprotected computer bits/chips and touch metal before reaching in there too. I watched a guy back in the day, in a shop, repairing a computer on the carpet. Lol. I knew it wasn't going to end well, we're talking motherboard on carpet kinda deal. And we told him it wasn't a good idea and he didn't know and acknowledged the lesson readily enough and was paying attention. But when he plugged the board back in and powered it on, boom, blew a chip right off the board and smoked the board. And then, the lesson truly hit home (look on his face said so, hehehe), as to how right myself and the boss were. We all laughed it off, it was an old test bench board anyway and he was a newbie and we expected stuff was going to get broken, while he learned. He was talented, ultimately and had a real passion for it, even years later.
THANK YOU for mentioning the tip about turning an unplugged p/s on & off again before working in the case. Yes-capacitors hold power, and PCs have lots of capacitors… Who woulda thunk it? 😀👍
In the day, when they still used LCD indicater on a FAX, I sparked two of them to death just because I was standing on a carpet. I practically blew myself off the carpet too, as the shock was more than the usual sparkie.
@@opsvixen Yeah, things were much less protected from static discharge back in the day. I had a friend who was a carpet installer and he would install anti static carpeting in some places. It wasn't common, because it was expensive carpet, but if your place of work had really important expensive computer equipment, then the owners woud spring for it sometimes. The other alternative was to put those anti static mats in front of sensitive equipment or under it.
Apologies for the ignorance, if the power supply is not plugged in, where is the energy going when you hit the button? Isn't the PSU not grounded without being plugged in?
@Невада большевик I honestly have no knowledge with Rosewill's products. the name/brand is indeed familiar, but I've never had/used any of their products, so I can't really agree nor disagree if Rosewill is indeed a questionable brand or not. but thank you for the input/feedback :)
To be more accurate: Turn off Windows properly, switch off the power supply, then press the main power button 2-3 times to draw any residue power from the caps, then disconnect the power cable and potentially LAN cable.
@@keiganogrady7481 well since I am there I plug it out :D It may not be required. During a severe storm, I would definitely disconnect it. The rest is definitely worth doing however, or even discharging yourself (Static electricity)
@@johnnewell5294 My mom had both and at least 6 others. When I took them off the computer became several times faster and more capable despite being very old.
McAfee is the worst of them all... Get free this an that and oh, I installed this for you. Trial ended, buy now, NOW NOW NOW! DON'T BUY? IMMA SLOW YOU DOWN BIATCH 😂🤣
Jay: Thanks for another swell, helpful broadcast. Yes, it's gratifying seeing the new gaming-driven boom in PC-building, after it seemed certain that laptops and progressively smaller premade, miniaturized devices had rendered obsolete any notions of DIY computing. People are taking computing power back into their own hands, and you're helping them do it as wisely as possible. Cheers!
I feel like I’m the odd man out for wanting to build a super powerful function-only desktop and then never wanna touch that sum’bitch again for 5 years. Not that I don’t love tinkering buuuut I want it to be extremely functional and perfect and then just sit.
@@JB-xl2jc Same, I also dislike RGB, I mean I would not get this rainbow crap even if you paid me, I so much prefer these old fashioned plain looking PCs one would see in an office from the late 90s, but of course if it pushes some good performance. Class
Yup, it doesn't have to look good to have beastly performance. Always put your hardware first and ensuring it works over putting shiny. If you want to add LEDs and other nonsense do it afterwards. Unless it comes with the box. But then not all "fancy" boxes on the market are actually good just because they look good.
0:23 This weekend I walked into my Microcenter and talked to whatever coworkers were left since I worked there, they have actually seen an uptake in customers and repairs since the pandemic. I'm guessing they're seeing more people since they realize that with the distance learning that their computers are quite outdated.
Thanks for making me feel ancient. You say you built your first computer at 10 and you've been doing it for 30 years. That puts you in your 40s I'm guessing. My first PC build was a 1x86. Then I moved up to the 286, 386, 486, then the Pentium series. My first 386 had 16 MEGS of memory that cost over 800 dollars. Ah, the good old days lol.
Never leave your rig unattended with the side panel off and wander off to the kitchen while your 'curious' pet parakeet is enjoying free flight in the room 😝
When I picked up my current computer from a previous owner, he had installed the AIO correctly into the top the case; a Define R6. "Correctly" meaning he had put the fans in the right direction and so on. HOWEVER! He had NOT removed the exhaust sound dampening cover from the top of the case, meaning the AIO was just blowing warm air into a wall... So I guess my point is: Make sure you flip the fans in the correct direction and that the airways are open and not covered by something....
I have a case that completely blocks the exhaust from the radiator with one of those covers. Back in 2016 when I built it my first thought was, why the eff would they block they exhaust with this thing. I'm glad I could remove it without having to modify the case, just some really really strong plastic clips got in the way of a clean removal.
Carpet doesn’t really exist in Europe like it does in the states because in the summer it holds heat, and euro homes are already designed to hold heat for the winter months. Combine that with no A/C, and you’ve got a recipe for crazy hot summers in your home
False carpets are very popular in West Europe but usually it's just a small one under the coffee table and the heat thing isn't a problem people buy AC's.
In fact, encrypt your hard drive with BitLocker (Windows) or LUKS (Linux) so they don't try to use it when you're not around. It's also a good idea regardless since it'll keep your data safe in case it gets lost or stolen. (And while we're on the topic of data, always backup your data on a regular basis!)
Here's one coming from an European I learned the hard way: You shouldn't forget to check the voltage switch on a multi-mode PSU and plug it into 230 mains when it's in 110 mode. It lets the magic smoke out.
My father bought me a gt 730 and a reyzen 5 3500 and the gpu is bottlenecked af. It stays at 100 while I’m just playing Minecraft on the lowest settings possible.
@@dragoneater2008_ I doubt your gpu is bottlenecked in this configuration. The cpu you have is a 6 core 6 thread, which honestly is plenty, and it’s a 2 year old architecture, meaning it’s still a very relevant cpu. Your graphics card on the other hand is over 7 years old, and is not comparable to anything in the current tech market. It’s the cheapest gpu you can buy. I recommend finding a gpu from the last 3 or so years that you would be willing to pay a little more for.
That was a helpful video. I went to college before the PC era. My first computer was an 8088. (unless you count the TI-99). So when computer building start my friends and I started building boring computers without all the lights that looked like you are walking down the Vegas strip. We started with the Intel 386 and I pick a 40 meg hard drive. We marveled over that thing there is no way we would ever fill that HD. And I put in 1 meg (if I remember right) of RAM.) So we made them for awhile longer until life got in the way. Work and kids. So to land this story it is now decades later and my body is falling apart and I can no longer walk but I have an electric chair so I get around and now at a young age of 63 I am living in a nursing home. (but we have private rooms and that is so cool). But I still have a love for computers so I have two laptops next to me connected to my 65 inch TV. But I decided I was going to study and build one more computer cause I am not sure about my future. I am now on Alzheimer's drugs cause I was having times like once I wanted to open another RUclips tab and I looked at the screen for awhile and I had no clue how to do it and others things. The drugs have helped it but we will see. So yes I sure had a lot to learn about the computers now. I put a NVMe in as my C drive and I have never seen a computer boot up as fast as this thing does. It was very fun building but I did not study the cases enough and as you said I bought a "pretty" case. It ran hot and I put my hand in to feel the air from the front fans and I could hardly feel any. I took the front apart and the fans did not have much area pen to draw in and also the were 10 CFM fans! So I have been studying trying not to have to get another case and start over because I have failed a lot and have so much pain all the time I don't think I could take everything out and start over. So I am going to have to try to salvage the case at this point. So I hope I can make this work with the new PWM (another thing I learned) fans I got. We that was too long and I am sorry but I love to talk but my pain is going high so I have to get in a different position. Thanks Jay for what you do and keep it up. Wish me luck that my fans work and it cools down cause I can't build another one from scratch in my condition now. I want to play some games since I can't do much of anything anymore.
I spent at least 12 hours doing research on my parts I have yet to put them together so I hope they all work together in unison with the least amount of bottlenecking.
I had same opinion since several years but in 2020 I feel one must do research and find a good antiransomware solution esp. for non-technical users. Ransomware have recently become more common than one might expect.
This hasn't been a worry for years now... all you need to do is let Windows do what it already does by default... it automatically defrags your hdd's and trims your ssd's.
opps well my ssd fucked up cos i moved it to primary in bootmenu it kept giving me a blue screen on start up so i formatted and started over what else could i do? it was bluescreening on startup......
#1 rule: don't ever check the component prices a day after you purchased them. You really don't need the "I could have saved how much?" shock.
Price match or return and buy again
What's done is done at the end of the day.
I’m guilty of this.. I just spent 3k on parts and after buying I was thinking I could of saved on that $270 motherboard or on that memory
Lol nah I’m returning the product and getting it at that lower price either from that store or a different one
@@southsidesicario5716 yeah almost the same here. spent $3500 on my pc and gpu prices dropped fast after that.
Pro tip: don't let the tears you are shedding over all the money you don't have anymore fall on the motherboard during assembly.
Hahaha! One expense after the other. It ain't cheap! Wonder what cost to own/operate is for us after parts, internet and electricity.
You had the money to get a motherboard? I'm trying an upgrade conversion. On a scissored shoestring budget (
@@jillianangell2570 that is the plan JA. In fact, its the last thing on my list. $$$ is too tight to pull the trigger on it yet.
@@jillianangell2570 thanks for the advice and support. 1650S is my goal. I've done a ton of research and thats the best bang for the buck in my sich. Just refuse to pay full retail plus on used items. I'll wait until they come back in stock.
Championship Racing Network I have a 1650S I’ll sell you for 100 bucks lol
Timestamps for the things discussed in this video.
1:53 - (Not) Setting your PCs on Carpets.
4:47 - Side Panels and Vertical GPU Mount.
8:20 - NOT Researching the Case before buying.
11:45 - Software Bloating/optimization.
14:38 - Hardware Mismatch.
18:53 - Honorable mention - RAM SLOTS.
Happy to help :)
MVP, thanks! 👌
Awesome, much appreciated friend-o!
Thnx👌🏻
My man u a legend
Awesome, thanks a lot buddy 👍🏻
1) Do not work on your computer hardware while its plugged in.
2) Learn what directions your fans blow and tripple check your installation.
3) Update your drivers and windows before you start installing any games or apps.
What I am confused by is how someone can _not_ know which way a fan blows. Computer fans almost always blow from the front to the back. If you're not sure, just look at which way it spins.
@Rondo James your going to want a cooling mat. Laptops are designed to get hot. If your gaming or doing long hours on your laptop, try plugging in a dedicated keyboard and mouse, and keep your laptop on a cooling mat so you don’t feel the heat.
me who tired putting more then one screw in my fan, figured out that tension was stopping it, so now my cpu fan is held in by one screw and you can hear it tapping. on a 2000dollar pc..... i hate that stupied fan i tired putting it on before i put the rad in, i tired after, i did everything in the end it just has a single screw but i have two fans instead of one. and i wiggled it and it didn;t have too much play so i should be fine....
@@user2C47 if you the one who put the fans in, then quite obviosly you can screw up with the direction
Update drivers is not a good idea with amd.
DO NOT, and i have seen this, DO NOT OVER TIGHTEN the motherboard screws, it WILL crack.
Also screw them in a little at a time. Do you best to keep the pressure equal. It is very easy to crack any kind of board by not screwing them in properly.
God damn, we're not trying to torque down head bolts on a sbc. Ease up lol.
When I screw anything at all, I do so in the x format.
@@BrianJonopulos And always tighten them, and then their opposite on the other side of the board. Never tighten screws sequentially.
And don't leave extra stand-offs in the case when swapping the motherboard for one with different hole configurations. Did that, was sorry.
I second a few things here;
1: Don't cheap out on the power supply (Melted a few drives that way)
2: Use "custom install" for applications to make sure they aren't adding bloat/spyware.
When I posted a list of parts I would buy and asked for input, the no-name PSU was the #1 item people pointed out. If the power isn't clean, the motherboard and drives will have to deal with it and while motherboards can certainly do that, they'll age faster. And if you ever have stability issues and ask for help, you'll be hung up forever with people asking you to try a higher quality PSU first.
Whats wrong with cheap power supplys?
@@_Cookie_Warrior_ cheap power supplies would just explode or catch on fire. buy trusted brands
@@_Cookie_Warrior_ so it's not that they're potentially inexpensive (cheap). You can do your research and maybe find a good one from a no name brand that makes them in the same factory as the big boys.. but if you're not dedicated to finding out everything about it, you should stick to a good brand that has a valid warranty. Who knows if that cheap company named Zxeii PSU xyz will really be around to honor their 3-5 year "warranty".
@@_Cookie_Warrior_ There's a couple of points to hit on here and some misconceptions. Usually you can trust certian brands, but sometimes even "good" brands they can let you down (one of the most infamous is the Thermaltake TR2 series) and interestingly, around a year or so ago a bunch of last-generation high-end PSUs had major flaws depending on use case (remember, people often buy these for peace of mind). The ones that I can remember off the top of my head is some Seasonic Focus Gold/Focus Plus Gold (and PSUs, like some Antec units based of them), EVGA SuperNova G3 and some other Superflower Leadex based units, as well as some Silverstone SFX units. These require a very certain condition to cause issues, but is still not acceptable considering how much these costed.
But to answer your question, there are 3 main reasons why cheap PSUs aren't good. The AC to DC conversion in switching power supplies isn't perfect, which leads to ripple. High ripple can create problems ranging from system instability (especially when overclocking) to shortening the lifespan of your components (lf all you ever ate was Burger King for your entire life, you would be dead sooner then if you stuck to a normal dietary pattern). On some units, another issue can be cooling. Many of these cheaper PSUs rely on a 80mm fan at the back, and even worse, the heatsinks inside these are often very anemic compared to decent units, so there's a good chance that something could catch on fire inside the PSU, Which leeds to another combination of issues. The fact that these cheap units are often rated above the amount of power they can actually deliver. Oftentimes, a 500W PSU may be a rebranded 300W PSU, or even in one case were I have seen a 1600W PSU actually be one of the 550W Thermaltake TR2 power supplies that I touched on earlier. On a decent design, this wouldn't be a monumental issue (it would still be an issue to see your 500W PSU not working when putting a 350W load on it, though) but with these cheap designs, they often do not have any or very rudimentary protective circuitry. A good design would normally shut down when you put too excessive of a load on it, or if the internal components of the PSU run too hot, but this is not the case for some of the cheapo units. Even if a power supply running above it's spec will often send very high levels of ripple to your components (if it wasn't high enough on some units) and then there's the potentiality of something getting too hot, a fire starting, causing capacitors to explode, and ultimately leading to the death of components inside your PC.
Sorry for the giant ramble. I'm writing this at 4AM and I really should be getting to bed soon.
Remember to put your Displayport/ HDMI cable into your graphics card and not the motherboard.
Happened to me on my first build
Why ?
@@johannesvalentino1650 If you put it onto the motherboard you'll either have the very bad integrated graphics which can barely handle a game unless it's old or you'll have a black monitor screen if you have no onboard graphics.
You might have to plug it into your mobo temporarily first until you get your GPU drivers installed first, though.
@@epochseven4197 no you don't most of the time. The GPU can still output video without dedicated drivers. It happened to me for building my new pc. My CPU has no onboard graphics so when building, I plugged hdmi into the GPU. First but no probs
Unwritten rule: Once you've finished your build, never ever screw the side panel back on before hitting the power button.
Why?
@@ararix3722 Combo of superstition and common sense. I learned this from a friend/colleague building PCs in the days of white boxes with little to no fans, bare-metal interiors, disk drives, cd-drives, Molex power cables, and ribbon-type data cables. If you screw in the side panel, more likely than not you're going to have to take it off again to fix a cable, re-seat the ram, fix the case wires on the MB, etc.) The superstition part is because you screwed in the side panel, it's not going to work and you'll need to take off the panel to fix something.
That's why I always put it 100% back together and then put away all the supplies/tools in storage. Then I do a christening ritual. That way I can force the looming problems to the forefront.
So you only screw it on after the power works?
@@somebodyelseathome I normally only screw the panel back on once I see the computer is up and running. Only because I've had to take it back off to fix my ram (I didn't get the ram in correctly). It was just a bit of a pain having to take it off again.
NEVER buy a very cheap power supply from a unknown company
Underrated comment.
Interestingly enough, a lot of prebuilts in my place use this even though it seems like a decent build I mean they have a good motherboard, gpus and stuff but the psu is suspiciously cheap and for a newbie that don't bother with such stuff could be tricked with it and bought a system that rigged to blow off after some time
One of the most important components of a PC, just never cheap out
Take it from someone who has had 5 psu's blow up that were cheap (and one that wasn't no idea what happened there) when your psu blows it WILL take something with it end of discussion it WILL kill SOMETHING. Now you might be in a situation where after replacing the psu everything works just fine but this is borrowed time...your hard drive your gpu your motherboard SOMETHING is on its way out and it is living on borrowed time. also sadly plus80 cert is no longer a good measure of a "good" psu alot of cheap chinesium psu's pass 80plus and are just as bad as the ones that aren't best stick to corsair thermaltake bequiet! coolermaster and evga (might be 1 or 2 i missed there) generally speaking if it is one of those you have nothing to worry about
Cost shouldn't be the factor. The PSU in my build I'm about to retire after 10 years was cheaper than many others on the market at the time and had lower wattage than the others. It was a Corsair and I'd read a lot of reviews at the time. But bigger wattage and price isn't better and the smart choice of a PSU should take into account reviews, but also what your build will need. People should do their research.
NEVER BUT NEVER, LET ALL OF YOUR APPS START UP AUTOMATICALLY WHEN TURNING ON THE PC, YOU CAN DISABLE THEM IN THE TASK MANAGER ON STARTUP, yea ❤️💨
I still remember when I need to change the startup applications I had to run msconfig
Only got Avast on startup, can't disable it anyways. I did have PowerToys on startup as well but PowerToys Run was giving me issues.
I still don't understand how I'm using half of my 8GB of RAM with just Task Manager open.
@@ExperiencersInternational yeah idk
1616gof ram and it uses 50%
I should run windows debloater
Why? Im new to PC
@@ExperiencersInternational just get rid of avast, as jay said, windows defender is good enough these days. i had to get rid of avast when windows 10 was still in beta and only missed it for about a week.
1.) Let jay budget it
2.) Let Kyle balance it
3.) Let Linus touch it
4.) Let the verge build it
The 4 pillar men of pcs.
3 makes a lot of sense XD
5.) Let someone from Microsoft, Google, or Apple install the software for you.
The BEST thing you can do for your PC:
1) Steve from Gamers Nexus
@@redgeoblaze3752 you mean a ton of bloatware? Nope lol
Aesthetics is definitely taking priority in a lot of pre-built gaming PCs. My husband bought my son one for Christmas. When it arrived I couldn't see any intake fans. Come to find out the intake fans were in the front completely blocked by the LED front panel. The only way they were getting any air was from a very small slit on the side. I ended up removing the plastic LED front panel and placing a mesh one over it to allow the fans to actually get air. I guess I should at least be glad the fans were set to intake as I had another family member buy one where all of the fans were set to exhaust. The computer kept shutting down because it was overheating due to no air intake.
Jay missed his 8 year anniversary 🤣🤣
@@SaraMorgan-ym6ue what ? What's the correlation of that with this comment???
Vacuum strat
If you don't need a silent PC then don't buy one that prioritizes running quietly using a visually appealing design. It depends on the build, but the tradeoff can have little to no effect on performance and an acceptable increase in temperature. They also do well in high-dust environments or serve as part of a low-maintenance build. It's not just about aesthetics and judging from where people stick their PCs, airflow isn't at the top of their list when making a purchase. Pre-builts cater to a target market.
Asthetic is the priority because it's a scam. They sell shit PCs but put them inside shiny rgb cases so someone who doesn't understand about PCs buys it thinking it must be good because it looks so cool.
My "don't do this when building a computer" would totally be "don't buy a cheap non brand psu". This is very common and can lead to a disaster when you least expect it.
Followup is don't upgrade in a prebuilt case with an undersized/cheap PSU.
cough, do your research..
and that goes for prebuilt oem stuff as well because some of them might actually have decent psu's in them, they're just rebranded. years and years ago HP was using the same PSU's as BFG(RIP) just under the branding of the factory that was producing them. some of the OEM builders still do that today and it's easy enough to check it assuming what ever your replacing still uses less then the maximum output of the psu.
Yes. Even if your budget is very tight. Compromise with a weaker CPU, less RAM, or even a flimsy junk case, even go without a case vs use any PSU that isn't specifically highly rated by someone who does that as their profession.
Also, don't go overkill on the PSU. Remember, you don't need a damn 1,000w PSU if you are just running a bare basic setup. My personal R5 build has the same 600w that I was using since bulldozer days.
Right ??? Because Brand name PSU's always use Brand name parts right.. Like Nichicon and Rubicon caps LOL
as if .
No, i think if you open a brand name / "GAMING" PSU you'll find a Leylon capacitor the same as you would in a generic
but i've also found, there is generic and there is SHIT GENERIC
Generic , they have Leylon caps
Shit Generic, Sanhua
and your high end PSU's are going to have the same
at the end of the day , Volts x Amps = Watts
and the volts or the amps or the Watts ARE NOT BRAND DEPENDANT
electricity doesn't give a fuck about your brand it just cares about conductivity and reliability of components
Now.. if you can show me that your PSU has Ruby caps and ... on top of that that it's well designed and ALL THE COMPONENTS ARE HIGH QUALITY then... I will stand corrected
but.. i've never seen that and i repair SMPS's (Switch Mode Power supplies) all the time
i agree with your credo, for the record, ONLY IF WHAT YOU DEEM GOOD IS USING QUALITY COMPONENTS but.. it's not
I think this is the most important thing that you should remember when building a PC
REMEMBER TO PUT THE I/O SHIELD FIRST BEFORE THE MOTHERBOARD.
This is hard to put tho. I'm started to be bored of putting this. now i buy motherboard w/ it allready on it like include on it if i can. feel ya
Fucked that up.
I don't even know what that is 🤦
YUP! building a FreeBSD server, totally forgot to do that. Also, RAM is bad, put it in as manual instructed, doesn't work. All old parts, project shelved for now. Need DDR3 RAM, don't feel like finding it at this time.
@@LetsGoRoadTrippin If you need DDR3 this days, I think you're doing something wrong
Personally I recommend putting all the parts through pc parts picker and it'll tell you if something incompatable
That's how I did it. Anything that doesn't match is easy to find and check again.
I agree with this one with one small asterisk. For some Ryzen MoBos, because of multiple gen support, they will appear in Part Picker with a warning that they are not compatible. For example, a B450 with a Ryzen 3000 series. Sometimes the software will be right and you need a BIOS upgrade, sometimes it has a BIOS flash upgrade option, sometimes you need a previous CPU, sometimes it already comes with the up to date BIOS. Always check they supported CPUs on the MoBo support page
@@deloreigames8641 OMFG GOD DUDE literally built a pc last week and did exactly what you said this is literally insane. But yeah it was a pain in the ass cuz it took me a while to figure out the problem
Some of the warnings to do with BIOS are just wrong and dont apply. My friend and I had the same warning, as we have similar parts, and it affected neither of us in any noticeable way.
Great tip!!!!
Having been a bench tech in my early years, one of my never dos to your computer is never torque the screws that secure the motherboard to the case to 175 foot pounds. Can't tell you the number of times I've run into systems where someone thought that fasteners securing PC components needed to have the same torque as the head bolts on an engine.
this is absolutely horrifying and reduces my faith in humanity
And I don't tighten the screws down until all of them are started to make sure everything centers up correctly
I do a few turns before moving to another screw. I don’t tighten anything until she’s done moving.
"$500 GPU" ... ah, the good old days.
How did it rose up so fast :(
@@manuxx3543 crypto mining and scalpers
Laughs in 799 2080ti bought in November 2019
@FortniteSucks and when you woke up you were all sweaty
@FortniteSucks prove it. Make a video, write on a piece of paper "For Travis" put it next to the 3070 and post it.
Always click "custom installation" rather than going with "recommended" so you can see everything that's going to be installed and you can deselect components that you don't require.
...always.
@@Agorger Yeah I've been using Ninite for years!
@Galaxy TS2 Completely agree!
I've seen browser windows with like 2/3 of the height filled with toolbars because of this.
Another very important thing is disable the windows explorer setting that hides the file extension - that being default is the main reason for PCs getting infested by viruses in conjunction with a user that doesn't recognize things as executables. It's literally Microsoft's fault.
Watching this after you finish a build is gambling with your self esteem
Ikr
fax
If people use common sense these things shouldn't be an issue.
@Good BOI stufo huh
@Good BOI stufo clearly typing is all caps proves you lack common sense!
If you're building for the first time make sure to use the risers! I had taken apart dozens of systems by the time I built my own from scratch and yet I didn't think about those little posts that the motherboard screws went into and I installed the board directly into the case and had it grounding out against said case! I was very lucky that my hardware all survived this debacle of an oopsie because I could have easily caused any number of parts to short out and die permanently.
That "Oh, NO" feeling you get when you realize...😰 😫 😩
What are risers?
@@nehemiahledwidge9131 I believe the correct term is called: "Motherboard Standoffs". They hold the motherboard up, off the case's motherboard tray. They look like they are made of brass.
@@lilblackduc7312 ahh I see. Thank you I’m building my first PC soon I want to
make sure I get everything right
@@nehemiahledwidge9131 I used the wrong word I meant standoffs, the little posts that screw into the case and then the motherboard sits on top of them and the screws go into them to mount the board. They keep the contacts on the back of the board from touching the case and grounding/shorting out.
Do not watch "The Verge" PC building guide...
You should watch it only in case you wanna know how to NOT build a PC... Or you had bad day and want something to cheer you up.
oh on the contrary, DO watch it. that's everything you shouldn't ever do. it's almost a comedy show.
it good comedy tho
I watched this and was dissapointed. It isn't a professional video but based on what everyone says about it, I expected blunders such as putting the termal paste on the bottom of the CPU rather than the top - but no, just a few misconceptions and poor thermal paste application.
@@Sebbo1298 what about the psu that was facing the wrong way???? your under selling how bad it was...you work for the verge?
Jay: Don’t set your PC on....
Me: FIRE
Jay: Carpet
Me: Oh....
Who would set their computer on fire!?
@@Googlegivemyoriginalnameback lol
So he didn't say not to set it on fire. Give it a try
@@TheFilminators bet
@@clumsycaden5708 is bigger is better then if my Temps keep going up it must be good
Don't let The Verge tell you how to build a computer
Scrolled too far to find this comment!
What if I don't have a table?
@@Chris-de2qc use your bathtub.
@King James If you can't find a swiss knife try to look for a friend named Phillip he might be able to help you out with some head.
Oof that joke was so bad I even aknowledged it myself while typing.
Don't let The Verge tell you how to do ANYTHING
I just built my first PC and i dont have a specific rule, but just a bit of sharing with my experience. PC part picker was my best friend. It helped me find compatible parts with the items i already knew i wanted. The next part, the build process. Guides on pc building are phenomenal! And also took me 6 hours to have everything put together leading me to say do not rush yourself especially if its your first build. When youve put it all together of course make sure to turn it on and make sure it works, but my best advice is to clean up the inside panel wire wise where all your components are, but only do that. Give yourself a day or 2 for a little time inbetween before you work on your wire management in the back. Having that time inbetween helps with recollecting yourself after the stress of putting it together. And the last bit of advice i can give which happened to me is after youve updated your BIOS on your motherboard if you get a blue screen when trying to install your operating system do not panic. Start by resetting your bios on your motherboard and then try installing your operating software. I spent 4 hours trying to figure out what was wrong and was afraid i damaged something in my build process but it was just a bad bios update. If you still get a bluescreen it is now time to PANIC!!!
Great advice.
Just finished my first build getting ready to post as completed on pcpartpicker: Highlyregarded LTT’s last pc build guide is 1:30:0 OP. used as a build order template to avoid logical mistakes and cover of alit if errors before you make them. I n my case moments before.
1. Never forget your PC’s anniversary.
it was anniversary of his channel
@Joshua Guenin bruh 💀💀
@@joshuaguenin9507 wow that’s tear shedding shit
Oh I broke rule #1 again...
@@purplekittigaming again
Don’t rush your build! Take your time to make sure you’re installing something correctly or deciding what parts you need!
My number one tip is not feel pressured about building one at all. Many just want an computer and you can be saved a lot of headache by just buying a system made already. To the inexperienced there really isn't any advantage to doing it yourself. I'd only tell people they should if they want to.
@Narax pre-built PCs are often poor quality plus building a basic system with aircooling or even AOI doesn't require that much knowledge, some ikea furniture can be harder to build.
@@mohammeded-dahbi7603 No, wrong. They are not often of poor quality, poor quality computers are always of poor quality. You can't use the worst as a reflection of the whole. Just because the cheapest hammers are terrible doesn't make all hammers terrible. It was sound advice a decade or two ago but now a days there are plenty of decent system builders.
Also, building a computer is not easy. Sure putting the parts together is easy but it is finding the parts that is rather difficult. To someone that doesn't have the knowledge already it isn't clear or even remotely obvious at all what is worth buying. There are a lot of things you take for granted and presume they are simple just because you understand them but these things are not simple and can take a lot of time to understand. The only advantage to building the computer yourself is that you get the flexibility to choose the parts you want. A person who is ignorant will not be able to make the most if anything out of this advantage and many good PC building services now a days let you pick the parts if you wanted.
@@SirNarax On the other hand, nowadays you also have plenty of services to help you pick the parts(pcpartpicker and newegg among many) and loads of easy to follow tutorials free on youtube, so there's really no reason not to do it at all and plenty of advantages apart from choosing the parts like being able to do maintenance and part replacement by yourself and also by understanding what goes in your pc and how it works in general allows the userto treat it in a way that will increase it's lifespan (a simple example would be not putting the pc on a carpet or in a cabinet).
@@mohammeded-dahbi7603 Just because there are resources to educate you doesn't make it any easier to learn. It is still a massive hurdle and the hurdle to buying a computer yourself is always going to be infinitely lower. And if you are just going to copy someone else's build why not just you know, buy the computer built? Which will save you the time, isn't that much more expensive if at all and you won't have to worry about doing it wrong.
Also being able to do maintenance yourself isn't a pro and isn't mutually exclusive. You can maintain a pre-made machine they are made out of the same components if you wanted to maintain it yourself. But many of these companies also provide to you that service. For many, working on a computer is not a pleasurable experience. "Do it yourself" is terrible advice now a days.
Jay, as a european I have NEVER wondered why "there is so much carpet" in your houses. My own room has carpet floor. We are wondering why the heck you build your houses out of cardboard and that's basically it.
here's your answer, from a fellow european: most of the us has a much higher chance of being hit by a natural disaster than most of europe, stone houses would still break, but be more expensive to rebuild. added bonus: their way of doing framing and drywall on top makes it super easy to retrofit ethernet or rerun the electricity wiring.
They have carpets to cover their old wooden floors while we all have stone or ceramic slabs
I could not imagine having a stone slab/concrete flooring for my house.
Holy hell, would it be hard to heat. All that stone just sucking the cold in from outside/the basement, and pumping it into the house...jeez.
I also couldn't imagine waking up in the morning, and making my zombie walk to the bathroom on a cold, immovable slab. Wood floors give, and carpet over a wood floor feels nice when you walk on it. Even a wood floor feels pretty nice to walk on barefoot or in socks.
It would hurt so bad to walk around in a house with concrete or stone floors. Our kitchens and bathrooms mostly have linoleum flooring, too, especially if you rent...only people with money can afford tiled floors, and even then, only bathrooms and kitchens have tile. Nobody tiles the rest of their house, they use wood and/or carpet for comfort.
As for the comments about construction, yes, we use wood because of the cost and ease of construction. You can also build entire walls and most of the structure of the house in a wood shop, and ship the walls to wherever the house is being built. And even if you have to build everything on site, you can be digging on a Wednesday and putting the shingles on the roof on a Wednesday two weeks later. They're extremely easy and fast to build.
@@nickpickerwi7787 Most people have carpet on their concrete and or wooden flooring over the concrete. Also, if you're rich you can get floor heating. Some places which I visite fairly often have that and its amazing if you're walking on socks/bare feet.
@@lennartjakob I mean. No? I'm from the Caribbean where we build houses out of stone and concrete and it's pretty durable
About the RAM slots thing, definitely carefully read your motherboard's manual. There is no standardized way of arranging the DIMMs. For the longest time, I thought it was always "every other slot" for dual channel, but my current motherboard has the channels alternating between each slot (though they did nicely color code them), meaning 2 sticks among 4 slots actually should go right next to each other in this board in order to get dual channel performance.
Depends on how the motherboard manufacturer laid-out the traces for the RAM. (Daisy-Chain, etc.)
Number one mistake I see: using a screwdriver instead of a Swiss army knife
Also, zip ties instead of tweezers.
Hopefully it has a phillips head screwdriver
Make sure to have a table
Oh man the Verge video was a nightmare 😂😂
Number two mistake: not enough thermal paste
I built my first PC the other day... Did a very extensive research even down to the type of mobo models and all that stuff. The "studying" part took me days and dozens of videos about each PC parts.
I'm just really proud and I wanted to share it with y'all! I've been using laptops for more than a decade now so it's a pretty big step up! Now watching videos on good practices!
Hey, congrats man!
Awesome!!! Congrats! :)
I feel you man
I’m currently now just getting into it : ) any tips and tricks are gonna be useful
@@Beautifuldifferencemaker I've been cleaning mine regularly... At least once a month haha
A few things I've learned to avoid over my years of building computers:
1. Don't overclock anything until you've tested and can confirm that the hardware functions properly at factory settings.
2. Don't spend money on good/expensive cooling unless you plan to achieve a significant overclock.
3. Don't assume you've discovered the problem until you've thoroughly tested every component that has a role in how it functions, regardless of how little.
4. Don't take the word of a tech centre as the gospel truth. Professional troubleshooters can still make mistakes and misdiagnose the problem.
Any advice to test every component? My PC shuts off when I play very heavy games, I’ve ran benchmarks for my cpu and gpu both at the same time, I’ve tested my ram, I’ve used a psu tester, there’s not much more I can do is there?
#2 is bad advice, there is no reason to avoid buying good cooling.
can i run my ryzen 5 3600 on 1.165 volts and lock it at 3.8ghz?
i have the stock cooler and the temps hit 80 sometimes when playing light games like csgo
@H C check your CPU and GPU temps under load. If it is failing during heavy gaming depending on the game it could be a PC part getting so hot it shuts down the system. If its CPU check that the CPU cooler is mounted properly and the thermal paste applied. If GPU overheating then you will want to look at case cooling. Check fans directions so it moves hot air out of the system or add a few more fans. You shouldn't need more then 3-4 decent fans on a case if it is set up properly. Depending on case having the fans or two at the front pushing air over the system whilst the ones at the back or back and top pull out the hot air is generally a pretty safe bet from my experience.
dont use a cheap undersized power cable (the one from the wall to psu) if you have a high power PSU (1000W+) if this cable is too thin it can overheat and possibly catch fire. not terribly common, but there are very cheaply made versions of these cables available
jayz: dont put pc on carpet.....
me: looks at pc sitting on carpet
@Vayzid that wasn't stolen but ok
_laughs in built-in dust filter_
@@moofey It's not to do with dust, it's the fact that carpets can have static electricity build up in them, which is obviously not good for your PC if your computer is sitting on a carpet.
😂😂
At least you got a vacuum cleaner for the price of a pc
Im 37 and built my first PC just by watching your vids for fun during here at the shipyard. Last time I owned a PC was in 2010. Thanks for sparking up a joy I had lost man.
Hope the PC life is treating you well my friend Jay helped me get into the technical aspect as well, except i’m only 19, greetings from abroad.
I’m trying to build my own pc for the first time what are some his vids u recommend?
Good for you man. I have the same story. I was 30 and working in a heavy equipment warehouse.
I built a gaming pc and a buddy of mine said I should apply for a help desk job at the corporation he worked at. I played on computers as a kid, but hadn't really worked on them in 15 years.
Here I am 5 years later, and I'm a sysadmin, and it all started with gaming and watching these kinds of videos
@@grizzlycmmg9578 shii me too, 19 n built a pc, only thing is that it still feels that I’m playin on my ps4 still except with 1440p. Don’t know the reason why my monitor or 3080 ti gpu can’t show the frames on the monitor
@@juaquiqui-kun4333 if you press alt z --> settings --> hud layout --> performace --> then just click fps and decide which corner you would like fps to appear. I prefer using steam (if you play your games on steam) for my fps layout it looks more clean and feels more accurate. Just click settings on the top left corner of steam --> click in-game --> In-game FPS counter, then just decide what corner you would like it on. I also prefer checking the High contrast color box. That's subjective tho haha. Hope that helped
Don't watch the Verge
But honestly, just like Jay said, research, research, research. Try your best to find out the best parts for your particular budget, including peripherals. You don't need a 4k 144Hz monitor if you're getting like a $1k system. Another point is that PSU, do not ever ever cheap out on it. You can get a budget psu, but don't ever switch your psu for a worse one just so you can get that better cpu. Chances are the better your parts are you'd want a better psu, for more power/efficiency.
i second this. i bought a 144hz 1440p monitor. now i have to spend a shitload to get good frames in 1440p. but ya know. it is what it is. Still love the monitor though
Yeah I'm definitely experiencing this right now. Bought a pc second hand and not knowing the psu I upgraded the gpu and doubled my ram and constantly have to lower settings so I don't blow everything up. Gonna get a 650w gold psu here soon
For new PC builders they a common thing they try and correlate is PSU rating = Quality
Which of course leads to them thinking low priced ones are “bombs”
I think I personally have a perfectly balanced system. I bought a 144hz 1080p monitor to display my i5-9600k paired with my OC 1660ti
Nightey3s I concur with Jay as well about researching the build as by doing so you can avoid pitfalls were the motherboard i/o placements doesn't work with the case you've bought. Admittedly that's less of an issue now due to standardisation and cable management being a required feature as opposed to a luxury. However many cheap cases don't have such basic features. Not to mention, they may have very short front i/o cables too.
The best places to find information is the motherboard manuals and case manuals. The latter is hard to find for cheap cases that get re-branded and sold.
As a new builder and gathering parts over a few months for a big build...id say, dont cuddle every night with the parts you have so far because you are insanely excited. Or at least, if you do, leave them in the anti-gov-infil wrap! Always wear protection when getting intimate with your pc parts. 🤘 love you guys, thank you for all your hard work and information.
You should list all compatible parts you want and buy them at once but its alright. Just saying.
Three rules:
1) Never buy a cheap psu from an unknown brand.
2) Never buy a cheap motherboard, most of the time it doesn't support certain xmp profiles or further upgrade in the cpu list.
3) even when you buy good parts check specs and reviews, sometime to similar products from known brands can have totally different standards
Well, I can agree with the first rule. it is not an unknown brand but I got it for free with my video card. you guessed it: gigabyte P850GM. I put this PSU in my pc but nothing happened. the psu just made a ticking noise. i had talked to some friends, i found out that this PSU is bad. luckily nothing happened. these are now being sold for €50/€60. I don't know if the problem with this psu has been solved yet, but I recommend that you buy a good PSU and do your research!
Righty'O Daddy'O
Be a good v8deo of what to buy for no future problems
I have a prebuild from iBuyPower
4) Never buy a used motherboard advertised as having "only one small fault" - I found out the downside of this recently.
5) Never buy overspecced components compared to what you need.
"It is easy to put money in the wrong components." - JayzTwoCents
Me with $300 worth of Corsair QL120 RGB fans in a $1000 build.
with a kraken x72 for a trash CPU. (also have expensive corsair fans)
i don't get it, it sounds like your money was spent on EXACTLY the right parts ;)
I just did an ATX build and wanted to go corsair. I nearly vomited at the price of 7x ql140 fans
oh my god
Wow, suprised you were able to find 2 corsair fans!!
My friend had 5 different anti-virus programs on his pc. They were all fighting against each other when he tried to stick in an usb storage the system was like yes no yes no yes no yes no yes no😂😂😂😂
I hate your profile pick but I appreciate it.
@@TheDecree93 my pleasure
@@FNFleExZ Hehe..I looked at it and...Wtf? Ok you got me.
🤣🤣🤣
When your anti virus IS THE VIRUS.
"Don't set your computer on carpet"
Me: *sweats nervously watching my pc on carpet*
Your pc: *sweats staring back at you*
Nah, we're good 🗿👍
i was gonna like this but the likes are at 69 so ill just comment this
my pc that is sitting on a collectable fallout 4 cookbook that still in its wrapper
If it’s in a case I don’t carr
Never put the side panel on before the first boot
I carry that over from working on cars, never shut the hood before the first fire up!
Ideally first boot would be with the motherboard on its box and not in the case. But yes a second test boot after installation wouldn't hurt.
My top worst things you can do:
1. Sticking with a single brand because of brand loyalty
2. Not spending the time to do proper research
3. Not exploring all options first (kinda goes hand in hand with two)
That's a good point about brands. I have my preferences but they're not locked down. Things change over the years and the best quality at the best price doesn't necessarily stay the same so you have to be open to new things. I used to be a Corsair PSU fanboy but now I'm running 2 EVGAs and they're freakin sweet. Used to prefer Gigabyte mobos but now I'm running 3 different brands. Same with Intel and AMD. Only thing I've stuck with over the years is Gskill RAM, and I now stick to Nvidia gpus (except APUs) because I like their drivers better but that could always change (eventually).
I wanna add something to sticking to one brand. It might not have anything to do with brand loyalty but if you like RGB and you then buy parts with lights in them it could be in your best interest to buy same brand parts that then use the same lighting software so you're not dealing with 3 or 4 different RGB softwares all at once.
it doesn't matter how much time you spend doing proper research if that research is a lie. Whenever a good part comes out, everyone is going to lie about it so it doesn't sell. They will tell you to run memtest86 which is a completely placebo program specifically built to make you think your RAM is working, so they can blame your expensive GPU instead. Then when you replace your RAM and all your issues are fixed, and you prove to everyone that your GPU is fine, they block you. The best way to build a PC is by gut feeling, because your gut feeling will not lie to you or provide you fake benchmark scores, fake 1 star reviews, and fake TDP.
@@milesfarber memtest is a really useful app if you know what you're doing. Most people "researching" aren't reading reviews but looking at specs like supported memory, how the mobo pcie lanes are shared, V core et al. It sounds like you are pretty new to computers so it would be worth learning the vernacular so as you can research a build's potential yourself using the data sheets rather than relying on reviews to tell you how well they perform.
@@supersimon126 I agree with that, but that kind of doesn't apply to my statement, because that's not about brand loyalty, but rather RGB compatibility/consistency. Great point.
If you’re a first time builder don’t neglect the user manuals that come with some of your components! Also don’t be lazy lol building a computer is as much about research as it is about building!
Also make a list of what your computer is going to be used for (office, gaming, video / music / photo editing, etc.) and base the components on that list. It'll help out a great deal when it comes to cost (and keeping technolust under control).
I’m just gonna buy a pre built. I understand PCs and components, however I am too lazy to bother. Components are too pricey right now as it is. I’d rather deal with one company’s return policy over multiple if any parts go defective.
@@Error-br1uy I got a 3080 Evga FTW3 AND 5600X from NZXT for $2200. So happy I pulled the trigger. Will game and mine with it
I had 3 manuals with me at all times during the building today lmao...
@Emmy search it lmao
This is what I like about listening to Jay. You can tell he is definitely experienced in his 30 years of building computers. In my eyes I'll call him a master of his trade. Anyways the things he talks about are really important. What I am about to say can apply to almost any other thing in life too: sometimes the very little details are overlooked in certain aspects that we may would or wouldn't believe to have a significant impact. Jay's analogy that he uses with cars is a really good example of this too. Some people may not know that if you get an engine that guzzle's gas, you don't want a weak carbeurator or fuel pump to cause the engine to starve out. Vice versa you don't want a fuel pump and carb that delivers lots of gas into a small engine, or else you'll drown it. Anyways what's important is that when we get into expensive hobbies we want to avoid wasting money :P
So get good at golf before you start playing the ProV1 balls which cost several dollars apiece? Lol
"If it doesn't seem to fit, don't force it." 🙂
When building a pc with a friend, early 2000's, he managed to get a DDR stick to lock in upside down. (We were building it inside the case.) As we turned the PC on for the first time we got a big spark, and then the motherboard was dead.
I did that when I was something like 8yo but when I realized the issue (since nothing booted of course) I just placed them back around and everything was fine afterwards
My pc had 2 rams. One malfunctioned so a friend debugged and removed the ram. System started running. As soon as he went home I inserted the other ram again in running system. It burned the motherboard.
imagine forcing the 24pin connector the wrong way :( I literally jumped when my friend tried that one
@@bobobobo3142 meijer?
That's not what she said. 😅
As someone who's buying and assembling their first non-prebuilt computer, this video was a gold mine. Thank you so much Jay for being so helpful/practical/down-to-earth. It means a lot to a newbie like me. Your experience and communication skills are invaluable!
it is actually pretty easy. Get an A+ book as a troubleshoot guide and READ the mobo manual. You will be fine if you do that.
ruclips.net/video/PEEQzIdboaI/видео.html RTX 3090 first benchmark leaked comparison with RTX 2080 TI this vid is private
Let us know how it goes bud!
Welcome to custom pc`s my friend!
Good luck mate, enjoy!
My pc is literally sitting on a piece of wood from Home Depot, no rounding for corners, no sanding, just a block of wood
Simple yet effective
I took a drawer out of a dresser and set my PC inside it one time 🤣. It was just a temporary setup obviously, but it definitely looked ridiculous
Thats my plan tbh
if it works it works looks dont matter
@@NightOwlGames ur not wrong, but I’ve cut my foot on it a few times so I might want to get a little sanding
Be sure to use standoffs under every screw hole on the motherboard. I have seen too many motherboards where only the corners were screwed down or only the six screws closest to the IO ports & PCIe slots and no standoffs behind the three holes toward the front of the case were used. More often than not, there were no standoffs under the DIMM slots. Even the plastic ones will work if nothing else. The best thing to use is a standoff for every screw hole--oh, and don't forget to put a screw in each standoff!
@@slip9637 Because if you don't use standoffs, the board can crack or break, also, the board can short out (the SMTs, etc. extend out the back of the board) on the case.
Unfortunately, not all cases come with all of the required holes.
@@user2C47 giggity
If you look at the solder around the mounting holes in a motherboard, you may realize: They're Electrically Grounding the Circuits. You can thank me, later...🇺🇸 😎👍☕
Never buy a graphics card just to become a scalper.
@Esteb5n Caballero people who buy anything really(graphics card, concert tickets, phones, etc) and resell them to the general public at a much higher price(about 2-3x more, depending on the industry you're in)
@Esteb5n Caballero basically; manufacturing needs to outpace demand and it dies out.
@Esteb5n Caballero yup, that's why scalpers make so much bank. They basically become resellers
@Esteb5n Caballero yeah, because there are so many scalpers stuff is always out of stock so people either wait or go to scalpers for stuff
Even of you say that scalping is quite profitable, there's an abundance of brainless rich people in this world.
Don't ignore new sounds from inside your case!
I wish people felt that way about cars, too.
@@tylerdean980 yeah bro that explosion that came from my subaru isn't anything wrong 😂
@@tylerdean980 “just turn the music up”
So if my computer suddenly starts revving up when it's typically quite is a bad thing?
@@zerohunterx5 Not necessarily. If the computer is overheating it has fail safes, like throttling performance to cool the chipset and CPU. What load was your computer experiencing? If you where doing demanding tasks, or many tasks, this is to be expected. What was the temperature in the room that your computer was located in? In the summertime, my computer always runs a little louder, because of the higher temperatures. If it only happens every now and again, I wouldn't worry about it. If you want to keep your computer running cool, make sure you clean the interior monthly of dust with compressed air, and make sure there are no major airflow obstructions.
DO NOT MESS WITH ANYTHING INSIDE YOUR COMPUTER CASE WHILE ITS RUNNING!!!!!
I like to live on the edge and top off my water reservoir while benchmarking.
Also secure your fans when you are blowing dust out of them so they don't generate a charge while everything is off
@@The_Man_In_Red that's actually a good advice which I haven't thought about, thanks!
I fried a $300 sound card doing just that. Whoopsy!
@@The_Man_In_Red what do you mean by "secure" them?
I'm asking cuz I'm legit about to build my pc this week😳😂
Just finished my build tonight. I installed my components and installed windows with Jays videos. Some things i would say. Take your time,watch plenty of videos and most import read the manuals!
Things to keep in mind!
1) 1:58 Don't set your computer on carpet, why? & recommendations.
2) 4:48 Side panel esthetics discussion, ventilation, GPU mount, improving cooling, airflow etc.
3) 8:24 Not researching the case before you buy, Airflow issues.
4) 11:45 Software importance, OS recommendations, Windows defender over Third-Party Antivirus software Less is more etc.
5) 14:37 Hardware, mismatching hardware, avoiding bundle deals, examples and advice. and do your research on parts! especially new builders.
6) 18:51 Honourable mentions, Ram slots and proper installation of ram slots refer to your motherboard manual, discussion and advice!
your welcome!
🙏Thanks :)
You’re
thank you!!
😘
Two biggest problems I see on PC build pages are:
1- people installing fans the wrong way
2 - plastering their CPU with thermal paste
@@00O3O1B aint no such thing as too much liquid metal
*The Verge flashbacks*
@@00O3O1B Actually that's not true. While yes, more thermal paste is generally not harmful in any way to your CPU or temps, it is actually possible to apply use waaay too much thermal paste. A friend of mine.... used so much thermal paste one time, that it spewed out the sides (which is generally ok...but) and actually managed to get under the socket and unbelievably onto the pins of the CPU. I'm not shitting you. I'd never seen anything like it. I still don't understand HOW he managed to get it UNDER the socket. But enough of it got under the CPU that it actually covered a couple pins which ended up causing POST to not recognize one of his RAM modules. It took me over an hour to clean up the mess (including socket and CPU pins) and teach him AGAIN how to properly apply thermal paste and reiterate to him, if he's unsure if it's enough paste, there's no problem with adding more, but NO, DO NOT PUT AN ENTIRE TUBE OF PASTE ON ONE CPU! One tube of paste should accommodate multiple CPU installs (At least 5 CPU's, unless you're installing a Threadripper, in which case 2-3 CPU's). Not one CPU.
I still have the pictures.
ruclips.net/video/EUWVVTY63hc/видео.html
@@valhallasashes4354 That's very possible lol. If you haven't watched The Verge yet, your friend might have found out it was too much if he used a Thermal Applicator. :P lolol
Pro tip: always have a surge protector between your PC and the wall outlet.
Or if you live in an area with several power cuts a year, use a full UPS. The surge protector didn't stop my wife's motherboard getting fried a few years ago.
Haha misread that as a surge protector between your pc and wallet.
@@MrTimmy3333 well I suppose in a way you are protecting your wallet if you use a surge protector. So your are correct 😀
My buddy has one of those whole house surge protection systems installed with individual surge protectors protecting his devices. He works from home, so it's a bit essential and piece of mind when you have to deal with pretty intense thunder storms during the summer.
@@adamboise3907 I sell TVs and computers for a living and try get everyone to purchase a surge protector. Personally I don’t see why everyone doesn’t have one. For the cost of them it just doesn’t seem worth the risk of loosing an expensive item.
Ah so that’s why the people at best buy say the OMEN is a oven. That thing sits comfortably at 145 degrees Fahrenheit
You can't spell OMEN without OVEN.
@@nickv1212 wait.
@@DannyGruesome I wonder what thanksgiving is like at the Gruesome household directed by Tim Burton.
I like how good of a relationship Jay and Phil have. Really makes it feel like a two man show, not a one man show.
...As for my #1 tip for new builders is not to run hardware that shows signs of problems, even if it works now. This is a rule that has bitten me multiple times for not following it. When I was still a new builder, I had some crappy thermaltake fans that did not last very long. One of them was making a horrendous noise, but I found that moving the wire around caused it to stop. One day I put my computer in sleep mode instead of shutting it down, like an idiot, and proceeded to mess with the wire. After that my computer stopped booting with anything plugged into PCIe slots, so I am pretty sure it shorted out and killed the PCIe controller in my i5 4690k. Thats all in the past now, Im not as stupid as I once was however I had another issue within the past 6 months come up.
In my current build, the first psu I used was my old Seasonic s12 650w. That psu was about 5 years old when I started my current build, and after about 6-8 months of usage it began to die on me. Thus, I decided to order a Corsair RM650. The first one I got did not work at all, so I sent it back and got a new one. However, the new one had this weird problem where one of the PCIe power ports on the psu would occasionally decide not to work, forcing me to open up the back panel and reconnect the cable (ironic, huh?). Since I was already upset having to send the first one back, I did not want to send the psu back again for this reason even though I should have. So, another 6 months down the line and that one decided to start faltering as well. This was right when "Borona birus" hit and I was forced to go through Corsair's warrenty stuff before I could get a new one. Took me 3 weeks before I had the replacement, but at least they upped it to an RM750.
I'm hoping this is the last time I replace a psu for another 5 years at least.
P.S. In the interim, I used an old 1000w Antec psu I bought used a few years back. That old thing still works like a charm, and it helped reassure my sanity that the problem with my PSUs was not stemming from any main components. The damn thing is about 10 years old now. Also, before anyone asks, yes 650w was more than enough for my system. I used multiple websites including psu calculators and pc part picker to validate my configuration.
The things phil says and does makes this show better. Good info and comedy in the same place hahah
@@pauleckman8852 Atleast not his laugh
Yeah, makes you feel like the half of the third man😂
his laugh is so put on lmao
it’s like linus and anthony. for some reason, tech channels have perfect duos
NEVER do anything you aren't confident about without researching it and asking multiple people who know about what you are considering doing.
Oh just dive in, try every single plug. Cross things up. No telling what you might discover.
@@yourhandlehere1 that is also good advice. You just gotta learn. The worst thing to do is really just not ever figuring it out one way or another.
@@BubbleS1 I tried putting a clock over my GPU and it didn't make any difference. All I had was a pocket watch though. Does it need to be digital?
@@yourhandlehere1 well first you need to make sure that it's over clockable otherwise it can't read the time on your pocket watch. Also it's a common misconception that you put the clock over top of it but over clocking actually means the gpu or cpu is over top of the clock so they can read it better.
@@BubbleS1 Well dragons! I guess it's not...there's no room to slip the watch in underneath.
Reminder that thermal paste goes on top of the CPU, not between it and the socket. There are actually people that make this mistake.
Alternatively, learn which parts are intended to conduct electricity and which ones are intended to conduct heat, and that, even though there is some overlap in which materials do those two things, they are not the same.
Jesus Christ 😂😂
No fucking way you're serious.
If you don't have thermal paste use Peanut Butter.
Looking at you, Verge PC build
My first rule: Never leave your PSU plugged in when working on your system!! I, myself, have fried more than one system thinking I flipped the switch in the back and didn't, and WHIRRR!! case fans and lights for a millisecond, then realize the PC won't boot or even power on anymore. Honestly don't see that AS MUCH with today's hardware but it still happens!!
A close second: Don't think your heatsink/cooler is "okay without thermal paste." It was appalling how many people back in Socket 436 days said no thermal paste was okay. I learned the hard way, TWICE, that thermal paste is pretty much a requirement , and not. an. option!
Thermal paste bit was stretching, you would have to be completely incompetent in PC building to not apply a thermal compound.
NEVER PUT 3 PIN 5V RGB INTO A 4 PIN 12V RGB HEADER. I Daisy chained my fan's RGB (inwin Sirius loop) and connected the single end of a multi purpose (5v-12v) RGB into a 12v because I thought, "Hey, more juice to power all these fans' RGB." Oh boy that was stupid. There was a pop, spark, and then a flame. Flame went out quicker than it took for me to react and now everything works except all my RGB headers.
Also: put your budget into performance and get to the looks when the PC is running, don't waste cash on aesthetics right away unless you are able to.
Press F to pay respect for the RGB header
Same thing happened to me man
Everything works except for the rgb header
Dumb move
Now I'm scared to go rgb lmao
I just found out I had a Micro Center near me. Right after I completed my new build.......live an learn I guess
I really wish micro center near me. The closest one for me is in another state.
@@GXShade Could be worse, closest one to me is probably on the other side of the world.
@@Acid1_ literally
@@Acid1_ oh, that is a really crappy situation too.
I have a couple micro centers near me, but honestly you can find better deals on pc part picker
I accidentally dumped a shitton of cranberry juice on my laptop and I think you should make a part 2 to this vid bc i didn’t see anything like that in your guide.
spun my chair around which somehow caused a big beer glass filled with water to tip over onto my laptop, i also fell on the same laptop some year earlier while slipping on ice and the screen didn't make it back then so i had to use my old crt screen. I guess it went through a lot.
@@smievil bruh...i once spilled a whole cup of hot tea on my laptop, I can swear my reaction has never been so good...i literally grabbed my laptop and put it upside down in a splitsecond....so it lived...bet then after a few months I fcking puked on it...and closed it afterwards...was a great surprise in the morning, and it still survived :D
Y'all need sippy cups
Strange, my cranberry juice gave me an overclock. What brand did you use?
Tripping over your power cord and pulling your laptop off the desk is bad too.
Im 35 yrs old and i just built my first PC thanks to your videos. Keep it going Jay💪
"Don't put your PC on carpet."
**Looks at PC I have on carpet**
lmao same
Something I figured out is that synthetic materials tend to have a tendency to accumulate static charges, which I was having a big problem with at work. My roller pad under my chair built up so much charge that conducted into my chair that every time I stood up the discharge would cause my computers audio jacks to react, setting of my theme sounds. Whenever I stood up, the sound of water splashing would occur, completely mystifying me and the engineers I work with.
The solution: I put some fabric softener into a spray bottle and treated my plastic roller pad. After that, no more problem. And the whole room had that fresh, spring smell! Which was pretty annoying, but it goes away after a few months. With my new pad, I just treated the bottom of it and that was enough to prevent recurrence.
I have no excuse as I have those Ikea steel feets in box for....6 years maybe? lol. Need to build that platform...
I’m glad I watched this as I was literally about to move my pc onto carpet
idiots going to idiot.
Don't price out components too far ahead of time. Especially right now, hardware prices fluctuate and you never know when the motherboard you were eyeing rockets in price due to low supply while a more premium one may come down a bit. Be as flexible as you can and find the best value at time of purchase.
Since I try to one stop shop (Micro Center) I usually don't start to price until the day I am going to order and pick it up, I will check out Best Buy at the same time because they are on the way to MC. LOL
True
"Place your pc on a wooden board, not on carpet"
Me using a Wii-fit board: "Interesting..."
I bought a "width adjustable" stand with wheels. It keeps my case off the ground by about 2-3" for like $10. Its very sturdy and easy to move your computer around.
Me using old wooden chopping boards cuz im in lockdown and cant find anything better 🤣🤣🤣
I feel so seen, I had to keep my PC on the Wii balance board for the entire lockdown!
Mine is literally sitting on top of a piece of the packaging one of my furniture pieces came on.
It's 4 planks of wood stapled together lmfao, with cardboard on the bottom (for that whole dust part)
Atleast your pc is lookin fit!
I made a whole cabinet for the two computers. I calculated the volume of the computers and the approximate volume of air needed. I added intake, intermediate and exhaust fans and added filters for each fan. I prefer to clean filters more often than whole computers. Although computer maintenance is also required, this is normal. It is important to have a fresh air flow and to clean the filters often.
*Don't forget to open your case several times a year to clean the dust out.*
Edit - There has been much debate. I believe the conclusion amoungst the wisest of these noble commenters is. It kinda depends on how much dust the climate you live in has.
The ideal range seems to be as little as twice a year, and as often as twice a month. All depending on the dust in your climate.
A year...? I do like 2 times a month
@@imran5373 I feel lucky I have a 30L so it's just a button to push and it pops out
@@crownregis Damn you live on the desert boy
at least every 6 months
@@crownregis omen?
NO 1 You Should NEVER do to your computer
USING CHEAP AND CRAP POWER SUPPLY
I agree
This is so true! I've had cheapskate power supplies go bad and kill a CPU or RAM stick. A low quality PSU won't have the same voltage stability as a high quality one, or will struggle under high loads, possible leading to early failure or random crashes/reboots. If there is ANY component in your computer that is the most important to not cheap out on, it's the power supply.
i mean cheap quality any components is a bad idea really. there's a long way from "cheap" to bleeding edge, though.
@@tzxazrael Power supply is one that people usually assume is alright to cheap out on though. It's important that new builders know how important it is to get a decent one. It doesn't need to be insane, just not bare minimum.
@@Shmozone there's a good chance if your $25 case comes with a power supply, that power supply does not deserve to ever be plugged into a power outlet. Lol
Me, watching this hoping i haven't done any of the stuff he listed.
Ok, I'm good, didn't check any box.
I pass the test since 1997, i was doing mods to cool vrm and cooling system.
Make sure you know what the correct airflow looks like.
Make sure to reapply thermal paste every so often to avoid brackets cracking apart when you examine your pc to fix another issue.
Make sure to take care of your pc and watch channels like this to avoid having to build a new one as well as what to do if you end up having to.. Although in my case considering my computer was built at the end of 2015 it was about time for an upgrade anyway.
In high school one of my friends took out the RAM while the computer was running
I once removed a Pentium 2 slot 1 CPU From the board when i "thought" it was off... It wasn't. It never booted after that.
@@Less3D lol
@@Less3D 😂😂😂
I used to switch all the keys on the chrome books in high school, it made me feel good.
To my big shame, I took my first "plug&play" sound-card literally.
I installed it, booted win95, something wasn't working with the jumpers or what not, so I took out the soundcard WHILE THE SYSTEM WAS RUNNIG.
I still ran.
I changed some jumpers and plugged it in WHILE THE SYSTEM WAS RUNNING.
It wasn't running then. The mainboard never came alive again.
Sad nerd noises :(
Never touch your pc parts with fuzzy or wooly clothing on, or after petting a cat.
They have these nice anti-static wristbands you can wear and ground yourself with to reduce static risk. I only use them if the weather is really dry, though, because humidity helps keep static down, too..
@@GenXGamerGirl_ Thats smart, i always use a anti static wristband, recently upgraded my pc and risked nothing !
@@GenXGamerGirl_ How about a 'Rivestrong Braceret'👌
@@rohanap5511 youre not fighting static, youre fighting cancer!!!
How else am I supposed to set up my space heater????
Installing AVG antivirus. Between the common popups to the hard to uninstall optional addons, this program has more in common with the malware it is supposedly against.
true!
AVAST all day long
The mighty have fallen hard.
@@AMeNz0r631 but why though? Windows defender is top tier
I don't use anything but window defender, never had an issue to be honest. And I look at porn and go to sketchy places on the web lol. The rare times I did do something stupid a simple re install of windows fixed it.
Pro tip (from a 22 year former PC Tech. myself), that I've seen amateurs fail to do for decades and wonder why they blow video cards etc.. Switch it off at the power supply, unplug it and hit the power button, to discharge the capacitors. There's a second reason not to put PC's on carpets too, ESD. And even though static is not as much of a worry these days, with protected equipment, it's still a good practice to drill into your head concerning any exposed, unprotected computer bits/chips and touch metal before reaching in there too. I watched a guy back in the day, in a shop, repairing a computer on the carpet. Lol.
I knew it wasn't going to end well, we're talking motherboard on carpet kinda deal. And we told him it wasn't a good idea and he didn't know and acknowledged the lesson readily enough and was paying attention. But when he plugged the board back in and powered it on, boom, blew a chip right off the board and smoked the board. And then, the lesson truly hit home (look on his face said so, hehehe), as to how right myself and the boss were. We all laughed it off, it was an old test bench board anyway and he was a newbie and we expected stuff was going to get broken, while he learned. He was talented, ultimately and had a real passion for it, even years later.
THANK YOU for mentioning the tip about turning an unplugged p/s on & off again before working in the case. Yes-capacitors hold power, and PCs have lots of capacitors… Who woulda thunk it? 😀👍
@@Suavissimo Glad to help!
In the day, when they still used LCD indicater on a FAX, I sparked two of them to death just because I was standing on a carpet. I practically blew myself off the carpet too, as the shock was more than the usual sparkie.
@@opsvixen Yeah, things were much less protected from static discharge back in the day. I had a friend who was a carpet installer and he would install anti static carpeting in some places. It wasn't common, because it was expensive carpet, but if your place of work had really important expensive computer equipment, then the owners woud spring for it sometimes. The other alternative was to put those anti static mats in front of sensitive equipment or under it.
Apologies for the ignorance, if the power supply is not plugged in, where is the energy going when you hit the button? Isn't the PSU not grounded without being plugged in?
I'd have to say that you should never:
- skimp on the budget for your PSU
- go for questionable PSU brands
- settle for non-80+ rated models
facts
I somehow got an evga 80+ bronze 600W for about $55 last year and I’m pretty happy with that price.
Known brand and 80+ rating to boot.
@Невада большевик I honestly have no knowledge with Rosewill's products. the name/brand is indeed familiar, but I've never had/used any of their products, so I can't really agree nor disagree if Rosewill is indeed a questionable brand or not. but thank you for the input/feedback :)
@Невада большевик Rosewill isn't questionable. You probably haven't used a questionable brand.
Disconnect the PSU cable when unscrewing anything. Dropping screw onto the mobo is not fun.
This should be higher
To be more accurate: Turn off Windows properly, switch off the power supply, then press the main power button 2-3 times to draw any residue power from the caps, then disconnect the power cable and potentially LAN cable.
@@tlfearofthedarkhun387 I heard Linus say that draining power is a dated step, but also why LAN cable?
@@keiganogrady7481 well since I am there I plug it out :D It may not be required. During a severe storm, I would definitely disconnect it. The rest is definitely worth doing however, or even discharging yourself (Static electricity)
@@tlfearofthedarkhun387 where do I discharge? My mom said to stop using socks /s
Never install McAfee
Same goes for Norton.
@@johnnewell5294 My mom had both and at least 6 others. When I took them off the computer became several times faster and more capable despite being very old.
McAfee is the worst of them all... Get free this an that and oh, I installed this for you.
Trial ended, buy now, NOW NOW NOW!
DON'T BUY? IMMA SLOW YOU DOWN BIATCH 😂🤣
@@johnnewell5294 bro? I think u Fried Ur brain
If I uninstall mcafee is my pc gonna run faster ?
Jay: Thanks for another swell, helpful broadcast. Yes, it's gratifying seeing the new gaming-driven boom in PC-building, after it seemed certain that laptops and progressively smaller premade, miniaturized devices had rendered obsolete any notions of DIY computing. People are taking computing power back into their own hands, and you're helping them do it as wisely as possible. Cheers!
Turn up ur refresh rate! Don't buy a 144hz screen and run it at 60hz!
ggx gang lmao
@@EMETRL loooool
"Function over form." "Don't emphasize aesthetics over improved performance." "Don't follow the herd." Amen, brother!
I feel like I’m the odd man out for wanting to build a super powerful function-only desktop and then never wanna touch that sum’bitch again for 5 years. Not that I don’t love tinkering buuuut I want it to be extremely functional and perfect and then just sit.
@@JB-xl2jc Same, I also dislike RGB, I mean I would not get this rainbow crap even if you paid me, I so much prefer these old fashioned plain looking PCs one would see in an office from the late 90s, but of course if it pushes some good performance. Class
Meanwhile the RGB mouse is merrily vomiting away on the Desk behind him...
Yup, it doesn't have to look good to have beastly performance. Always put your hardware first and ensuring it works over putting shiny.
If you want to add LEDs and other nonsense do it afterwards. Unless it comes with the box. But then not all "fancy" boxes on the market are actually good just because they look good.
I definitely didn't follow the herd, I went for Aesthetics + Improved performance lol
0:23 This weekend I walked into my Microcenter and talked to whatever coworkers were left since I worked there, they have actually seen an uptake in customers and repairs since the pandemic. I'm guessing they're seeing more people since they realize that with the distance learning that their computers are quite outdated.
ruclips.net/video/PEEQzIdboaI/видео.html RTX 3090 first benchmark leaked comparison with RTX 2080 TI this vid is private
I was at Microcenter Sunday and I waited in line 20 minutes just to check out. I've never seen anything like that.
@@barryj0413 The line has occasionally been 30+ at times. I've seen it wrapped all around the inside of the store.
Thanks for making me feel ancient. You say you built your first computer at 10 and you've been doing it for 30 years. That puts you in your 40s I'm guessing. My first PC build was a 1x86. Then I moved up to the 286, 386, 486, then the Pentium series. My first 386 had 16 MEGS of memory that cost over 800 dollars. Ah, the good old days lol.
Never leave your rig unattended with the side panel off and wander off to the kitchen while your 'curious' pet parakeet is enjoying free flight in the room 😝
LOL
Obamna
SODA!!! 🤣
Rufus noooooooo!
We had to keep our cockatiels far far away while we were putting ours together- they always wanna chew on the most sensitive items 😞
When I picked up my current computer from a previous owner, he had installed the AIO correctly into the top the case; a Define R6. "Correctly" meaning he had put the fans in the right direction and so on.
HOWEVER! He had NOT removed the exhaust sound dampening cover from the top of the case, meaning the AIO was just blowing warm air into a wall...
So I guess my point is: Make sure you flip the fans in the correct direction and that the airways are open and not covered by something....
I have a case that completely blocks the exhaust from the radiator with one of those covers. Back in 2016 when I built it my first thought was, why the eff would they block they exhaust with this thing. I'm glad I could remove it without having to modify the case, just some really really strong plastic clips got in the way of a clean removal.
Doesn’t everyone do the feel test? If my fan is running right I should feel air movement outside the case...
@@JB-xl2jc ikr
#1 thing you shouldn't do to your computer:
Forget to cherish it
Carpet doesn’t really exist in Europe like it does in the states because in the summer it holds heat, and euro homes are already designed to hold heat for the winter months. Combine that with no A/C, and you’ve got a recipe for crazy hot summers in your home
You can see some carpets in older eastern European countries (I'm talking about Slavs xD)
False carpets are very popular in West Europe but usually it's just a small one under the coffee table and the heat thing isn't a problem people buy AC's.
Carpets are very common in the UK still. I’d say most bedrooms and home offices have carpets.
Carpets are for hotels in Romania!
@@TTRex87 slavs don't exist outside of eastern europe, it was redundant to mention them...
Always love how the cameraman having a good laugh behind the scene, it gives some special touch to the show haha
I agree it really feels much funnier ☺️
Things I would never do while building a system:
Letting Linus hold my motherboard
Correction: Let Linus hold anything...
Correction correction: never letting Linus near your computer components EVER!!
@@TheDeadmanTV i bet his wife wouldn't even let him hold his kids as babies
Or just don't go near someone who says rgb give more fps
Don't let guests, neighbors or friends use your computer. Keep an expendable laptop, hand it to them with a 🙂
In fact, encrypt your hard drive with BitLocker (Windows) or LUKS (Linux) so they don't try to use it when you're not around. It's also a good idea regardless since it'll keep your data safe in case it gets lost or stolen. (And while we're on the topic of data, always backup your data on a regular basis!)
@@epochseven4197 and Workman keyboard layout :P
@@epochseven4197 or just put a password
Don't have guests or friends at all. Works for me
Yea wouldnt want them to judge me by the type of porn i watch.
Here's one coming from an European I learned the hard way: You shouldn't forget to check the voltage switch on a multi-mode PSU and plug it into 230 mains when it's in 110 mode. It lets the magic smoke out.
You should never turn on a water pump before plugging the holes on the other side of the graphics card :)
Hahaha. Kyle learned that one the hard way 😂😂😂
LTT: 😒 okay!
oddly specific ?🤔
Simply, don't be lazy with your computer and setup. It's your time and effort spent on it, make it worthwhile.
Dam it's your wife bruh?
lmao
@Clarity -RUNX- simp
My father bought me a gt 730 and a reyzen 5 3500 and the gpu is bottlenecked af. It stays at 100 while I’m just playing Minecraft on the lowest settings possible.
@@dragoneater2008_ I doubt your gpu is bottlenecked in this configuration. The cpu you have is a 6 core 6 thread, which honestly is plenty, and it’s a 2 year old architecture, meaning it’s still a very relevant cpu. Your graphics card on the other hand is over 7 years old, and is not comparable to anything in the current tech market. It’s the cheapest gpu you can buy. I recommend finding a gpu from the last 3 or so years that you would be willing to pay a little more for.
That was a helpful video. I went to college before the PC era. My first computer was an 8088. (unless you count the TI-99). So when computer building start my friends and I started building boring computers without all the lights that looked like you are walking down the Vegas strip. We started with the Intel 386 and I pick a 40 meg hard drive. We marveled over that thing there is no way we would ever fill that HD. And I put in 1 meg (if I remember right) of RAM.) So we made them for awhile longer until life got in the way. Work and kids. So to land this story it is now decades later and my body is falling apart and I can no longer walk but I have an electric chair so I get around and now at a young age of 63 I am living in a nursing home. (but we have private rooms and that is so cool). But I still have a love for computers so I have two laptops next to me connected to my 65 inch TV. But I decided I was going to study and build one more computer cause I am not sure about my future. I am now on Alzheimer's drugs cause I was having times like once I wanted to open another RUclips tab and I looked at the screen for awhile and I had no clue how to do it and others things. The drugs have helped it but we will see.
So yes I sure had a lot to learn about the computers now. I put a NVMe in as my C drive and I have never seen a computer boot up as fast as this thing does. It was very fun building but I did not study the cases enough and as you said I bought a "pretty" case. It ran hot and I put my hand in to feel the air from the front fans and I could hardly feel any. I took the front apart and the fans did not have much area pen to draw in and also the were 10 CFM fans! So I have been studying trying not to have to get another case and start over because I have failed a lot and have so much pain all the time I don't think I could take everything out and start over. So I am going to have to try to salvage the case at this point. So I hope I can make this work with the new PWM (another thing I learned) fans I got. We that was too long and I am sorry but I love to talk but my pain is going high so I have to get in a different position. Thanks Jay for what you do and keep it up. Wish me luck that my fans work and it cools down cause I can't build another one from scratch in my condition now. I want to play some games since I can't do much of anything anymore.
Hi John, did you manage to get the install the better fans to cool your pc? Hope you're enjoying some sweet games now
This is so wholesome
How is your computer build john?
Hey, John! I hope you are doing well else, I really do! How is your build going? :)
What games are you gonna hit up?
I spent at least 12 hours doing research on my parts I have yet to put them together so I hope they all work together in unison with the least amount of bottlenecking.
wow. now you only have 6 hrs to Put it ALL together! No Stress There! lol
He's right, I haven't used an antivirus program in years. All it takes is some common sense and a bit of knowing what you're doing.
I had same opinion since several years but in 2020 I feel one must do research and find a good antiransomware solution esp. for non-technical users. Ransomware have recently become more common than one might expect.
seeing the 699$ starter pc vs the now 1100$ minimum really hit home how much the semiconductor shortage has ruined it for new pc gamers
I mean that pc had a totally different gpu too lol
$1100 for a PC that gets 66fps @1080p on GTA V? GTFOH!!!
But is it _really_ that much better than my PC that I built in 2016 for $300 + a drive I already had?
There is literally carpet in almost every uk home going
@@Cakebattered I just built a pc for my best friend for 1200$, has a 3060/r7 3800x/b550/850w/32gb 3600Mhz so what the fuck are you talking about 😂
Never defragment an SSD. It will reduce the lifespan. Its only good for a HDD.
Thank you I did not know that.
This hasn't been a worry for years now... all you need to do is let Windows do what it already does by default... it automatically defrags your hdd's and trims your ssd's.
Oh man people still do this?
@@adsgalore777 RIP my SSD...
opps well my ssd fucked up cos i moved it to primary in bootmenu it kept giving me a blue screen on start up so i formatted and started over what else could i do? it was bluescreening on startup......
Old homes in europe have carpet too. But they havnt been popular for decades. Its more of a "dead grandmas home" thing.