Watching this, and wondering about cables and wiring? We've put together a super detailed guide that covers this in great depth! 👉 ruclips.net/video/AIP4fYNjnF4/видео.htmlsi=WxUj-RZeJ9-soBK8
Here’s a personal note of mine, based on certain builds I’ve seen. While installing an AIO with an intake configuration, you need to pay a lot of attention when you’re mounting the fans. If the fan holes aren’t visible on both ends before you attempt to install the fans, you run the risk of driving the fan screws directly into the fins of the radiator - potentially impacting its performance.
Also, if you’re planning on using a custom AM5 bracket, be sure to install it when the motherboard is resting on a flat antistatic surface when the standard bracket is removed from the board, as that area of the motherboard’s backplate will detach if it isn’t being held against the motherboard itself.
I initially had some concerns about whether this would serve as a comprehensive guide, but I was pleasantly surprised. Great job! I shared a detailed video from LTT with my friend to ensure she felt completely at ease with the building process. Then I stumbled upon this gem. The duration was just perfect for a day-of tutorial. Thank you for your hard work and keep up the excellent video!!
It’s worth mentioning that the socket cover should be kept somewhere where it’s easily accessible as from what I’ve heard it’s sometimes required if you return the motherboard.
I’m starting to save up to build my own pc, will probably take a while to get enough money but this is the vid I’ll use to help me build it, I’ll reply to this comment when I’m building it
I feel like the video title is not something you should encourage. Don’t rush the building process if you’re not experienced as it’s easy to make a mistake when going fast.
@@collinhalverson4681 ah you might be right. I’m not gunna lie I just skipped to the end to see what the final build looked like because I liked the case from the thumbnail lol
Watching this on 0.75 playback speed instead of normal playback is much better. I felt like I'd had too much caffeine and sugar on first watch, as it's like everything is being said and explained at hyperspeed to fit in to the 15mins. Much better with it being slowed down slightly! Great video by the way, very informative and perfect for me as a newbie, just bring the pace down a notch 🙂
looking into building one atm. thx for making it look less daunting. now for me too look for and make sure the parts i build are good and will actualy go together. wish me luck
If you could, would you be able to share with me the parts you are using for the build? It would be great if you can list all the parts including the utility you will be using.
Pcpartpicker is a great tool as you picking and putting a build together, they have some suggestion on parts (full build reccomendations and you can change things here and there to fit what you want better) or you can start from scratch you put all of your parts individually and it oftwn tells you if there are things that don't match(not fool proof but a pretty good guide).
@@BlacksmithBL nice one brother. Planning on doing my own fairly soon for the first time and i’ve no idea what i’m doing 😂 seems a bit daunting but fingers crossed I can manage it!
@@bruhframe5604 Depends on your circumstances. I'd say have multiple sources of income (job, side hustles, investments) and live with your parents if you can, if u cant, be frugal in every part of your life. shop at thrift stores, buy grocies from the cheap supermarket or grow your own food, downgrade your car or use cheaper transportation. dont spend on unneccesary things like morning coffess, cigrattes/alchol, nights out and takeaways etc etc. Be very frugal and do lots of things to earn money, eventually you will get there. The other option is to get a budget pc. i got a pc with i5-12400f, rtx 4060 (used) , cheap 1tb ssd, cheap case, gamemax psu and other affordable parts with added up to £550
Thank you so much for this video! Super easy to follow, and when stuck other youtube videos came in handy. This video has all of the fundamentals, and I kept coming back during my building process. Practice makes perfect... took GeekaWhat 17 mins, took me about 3 hours lol. Can't wait until I can do it again!
Im here due to Sony announcing the PS5 Pro outrageous price for a non-physical drive. Im sure there will be someone else coming in behind me. Im putting my $700 towards a PC. I previously had a GTX 970 build years ago. So now im back on the PC market. Phew. Feels good to be back. I need a refresher. Thanks my man
5:15 These days, many M.2 SSD come with thermal putty already installed. In this case, you can CHOOSE whether to use the putty on the SSD card or on the motherboard's SSD cover... but don't use both. Peel one off completely and wipe the surface down with a bit of rubbing alcohol to remove any residue, then install the SSD, then put the cover on. You only need ONE layer of the thermal putty.
Top video and top explanation - thanks ever so. I am super close to building my first PC and this video has given me a lot more confidence. I have also checked out your website and this will be my go-to reference site. Cheers.
Any advice for where should I buy these components from? just go to the local stores(like best buy or micro center) or from amazon, ebay or smth like that?
First time I built mine I forgot to plug in the power connector for the aio. I turned on the pc and watched as the cpu temp went from 0 F to 98F in about 10 seconds. Parents thought it was normal but I knew I that it was way to hot. Glad I knew my facts and didn’t listen to my parents.
I remember having something like that happen. I noticed that the temperatures kept getting random spikes, ultimately culminating in a failsafe system shutdown. Upon investigation, I found the problem - the CPU_FAN plug was only partially inserted. It was enough for the motherboard to accept the AIO pump, but not enough for the AIO pump to properly manage and detect the temperatures.
i've always wonder how do you like know all this stuff?do you have to study computer software or science to know all the specific types of CPU PSU or anything because im planning to start a pc building building business and i have only known the basics. please give me advice
lol. This has nothing to do with computer science. These are 2 very different fields. A lot of the PC builders on youtube are self-taught. You don't go to school to learn how to build PCs. A lot of us learned through trial and error and curiosity and determination. No one truly knows al the technical details about PCs. Its too complicated for the majority of people, even seasoned PC builders. Starting your own PC building business is going to be tough. Not to discourage you, but you have to see if it makes sense in your area. Building PCs is a niche market. If you can find the right market in your area, you may be ok, but it will be tough out there.
Since meeting you at a gaming festival, your vids have been very informative and great tuitions. I'm finally looking at trying to upgrade my aging PC with new MB, CPU, RAM and AIO, but keeping my old case and fans. However, can I utilise my old M2 drive as my boot drive too? It'll have my win10 license. And with the new hardware should be a free upgrade to win11. Is this possible?
Guys is this a good build? Case: Antec Performance 1 FT CPU: Intel® Core™ i5-14600K GPU: ZOTAC Gaming GeForce RTX 4070 Ti Mobo: ASUS Prime Z790-A WiFi 6E RAM: CORSAIR VENGEANCE RGB DDR5 64GB (2x32GB) 6000MHz CL30 SSD: Samsung 990 PRO Series - 2TB Gen4 PSU: Cooler Master MWE Gold 850 V2 AIO: ARCTIC Liquid Freezer II 360
@@caiden6969 As I said, they come with the respective parts so yes the PSU comes with power cables. Now, if you're referring to extension power cables that a lot of tech build videos show, then no. Those are purely for aesthetics and have to be purchased separately.
Hi there but you know when he us talking about cables do you have to buy the cpu gpu motherboard and any other cables seperately or will they come in their own component box
The RGB cabling is always confusing. some cases don't have what was pictured here and you have to attach it to the mobo. It also doesn't help that the cables aren't labeled for us newbies! The RGB is really the only confusing aspect of the build to me. Troubleshooting the BIOS is a whole other story!
hey, a little late here but no, the 7800x3d is even more expensive than the 3060ti itself and it will be such an uneven combo that it will bottleneck(underperform) basically get a cheaper cpu like the 5800x3d because its the same peformance
Hey Geeka instead of how much budget do you have, how much do you REALLY need to play games in 2023/24 so people don't actually spend their entire budget... Toughts?
It depends on what kind of games you want to play at what resolution and at what desired frame rate. The needs of 4k 144fps is going to be very different to 1080p 60 fps. You could play at 720p to maximise budget. If you can tolerate potato spec play then you can build a potato spec PC.
my case has 4 inbuilt fans and I am thinking of getting a ryzen 5 7600 ( that comes with a stock cooler) Is it enough for the cpu, 32gb of ram and an rtx 4060?
Things that people will never tell cabinet fans fan hub is quite cheap buy it it's easy to manage cable at a single point individual to motherboard argb connectors can't be painfull and sync them too . Supoose you have normal RGB fans and no argb you don't care much just want cooling. Most cases when buying a cheaper cabinet fans or older ones you may not have the proper connector put it with the PSU molex connectors and stacks it or stack it and use a unused sata pin. Check your motherboard properly for what is the front panel connector for power and restart Like Msi the physical never matched the onnline one. Read what's written on the Mobo. Power and re-start pins and the argb header can look similar until you look close don't try to push it it won't fix there you may break it . I thanks msi fir one thing highlightimg the pump header for AIO with metal stainless thing covering it . Unless gigabyte fight to find what is what they're manual in box throw it in Dustin and read the onnline one .
Watching this, and wondering about cables and wiring? We've put together a super detailed guide that covers this in great depth! 👉 ruclips.net/video/AIP4fYNjnF4/видео.htmlsi=WxUj-RZeJ9-soBK8
where do you get the screws to install the motherboard
@@VedderboiIn the mother board book or the case
box
Whos here preparing for making your first pc, without any parts?
Me
me
Me lol except im also waiting to get responses from some people on if i picked out good parts
Me
@@DragonFire42508just ask chat gpt
Here’s a personal note of mine, based on certain builds I’ve seen. While installing an AIO with an intake configuration, you need to pay a lot of attention when you’re mounting the fans. If the fan holes aren’t visible on both ends before you attempt to install the fans, you run the risk of driving the fan screws directly into the fins of the radiator - potentially impacting its performance.
Also, if you’re planning on using a custom AM5 bracket, be sure to install it when the motherboard is resting on a flat antistatic surface when the standard bracket is removed from the board, as that area of the motherboard’s backplate will detach if it isn’t being held against the motherboard itself.
Thx
I initially had some concerns about whether this would serve as a comprehensive guide, but I was pleasantly surprised. Great job! I shared a detailed video from LTT with my friend to ensure she felt completely at ease with the building process. Then I stumbled upon this gem. The duration was just perfect for a day-of tutorial. Thank you for your hard work and keep up the excellent video!!
You just got yourself a new sub!!!!! KEEP UP THE GREAT WORK DUDE!!!
It’s worth mentioning that the socket cover should be kept somewhere where it’s easily accessible as from what I’ve heard it’s sometimes required if you return the motherboard.
Recently transferred from laptop to proper PC and got really overwhelmed. Thank you for simplifying it so clearly!
My bigger brother realized pre built pc’s are mostly scams so he’s buying parts to build a pc for me. I’m watching this for preparation before hand
I’m starting to save up to build my own pc, will probably take a while to get enough money but this is the vid I’ll use to help me build it, I’ll reply to this comment when I’m building it
I feel like the video title is not something you should encourage. Don’t rush the building process if you’re not experienced as it’s easy to make a mistake when going fast.
I think he meant that he explains it in less than 15 minutes, not telling you how to actually build in 15 minutes.
@@collinhalverson4681yep you are right
@@collinhalverson4681 ah you might be right. I’m not gunna lie I just skipped to the end to see what the final build looked like because I liked the case from the thumbnail lol
@@damejonifyI’m not gonna lie, you might be tarded
@@SlickRick81338 just an honest mistake relax kid.
Watching this on 0.75 playback speed instead of normal playback is much better. I felt like I'd had too much caffeine and sugar on first watch, as it's like everything is being said and explained at hyperspeed to fit in to the 15mins. Much better with it being slowed down slightly! Great video by the way, very informative and perfect for me as a newbie, just bring the pace down a notch 🙂
I agree. That is one fast talking dude!
I bought all of my parts and I was having trouble putting it together. Thanks for this vid!
Were you able to build the CPU?
looking into building one atm. thx for making it look less daunting. now for me too look for and make sure the parts i build are good and will actualy go together. wish me luck
Best of luck!! You can definitely do it!
If you could, would you be able to share with me the parts you are using for the build? It would be great if you can list all the parts including the utility you will be using.
Pcpartpicker is a great tool as you picking and putting a build together, they have some suggestion on parts (full build reccomendations and you can change things here and there to fit what you want better) or you can start from scratch you put all of your parts individually and it oftwn tells you if there are things that don't match(not fool proof but a pretty good guide).
@@pinkfiffty3094😊😊😊😊
How did it go?
Exactly what I needed. Simple, brief, informative. Thank you. 🙏🏻
I've been stressing over my PC build, but I feel much more confident after seeing this. Even the liquid cooler was simple with this case.
This video could not have been timed more perfect. I just bought my first pc and need to assamble it but did not know how to do it. Thanks man
Yo if you did it now, was it easy? And how stress inducing was it?
Literally ordered my parts and waiting for them to be delivered so that I can assemble my first ever PC haha
@@BlacksmithBLhow did it go? did you manage it?
@@ClassicCulprit yes I did man, thanks for asking! Would 100% recommend, just watch a lot of tutorials and you will be golden!
@@BlacksmithBL nice one brother. Planning on doing my own fairly soon for the first time and i’ve no idea what i’m doing 😂 seems a bit daunting but fingers crossed I can manage it!
Perfect timing, I will build a PC soon
Did u build it?
@@ArjanKhanuja-s6f Yes
i just spend 3k on part and didnt know how to build, thank you for the help without you i couldnt done this
How long did it take u to save to 3k?
you should not trusted with that much money if you spend it without doing research beforehand
@@bruhframe5604 Depends on your circumstances. I'd say have multiple sources of income (job, side hustles, investments) and live with your parents if you can, if u cant, be frugal in every part of your life. shop at thrift stores, buy grocies from the cheap supermarket or grow your own food, downgrade your car or use cheaper transportation. dont spend on unneccesary things like morning coffess, cigrattes/alchol, nights out and takeaways etc etc. Be very frugal and do lots of things to earn money, eventually you will get there. The other option is to get a budget pc. i got a pc with i5-12400f, rtx 4060 (used) , cheap 1tb ssd, cheap case, gamemax psu and other affordable parts with added up to £550
Thank you so much for this video! Super easy to follow, and when stuck other youtube videos came in handy. This video has all of the fundamentals, and I kept coming back during my building process. Practice makes perfect... took GeekaWhat 17 mins, took me about 3 hours lol. Can't wait until I can do it again!
more detailed and quicker than the other ones, w tut
Just built my first PC using this brilliant guide 🤗
THANK YOU SO MUCH THIS HELPED ME SO MUCH
thanks i was gonna build one on black friday😊
have fun! building your first pc and then game on it is the best feeling.
@@ravey4814 thanks
same bro
what case u gonna get for ur build?
@@dull123andcutemew prob the corsair 5000d airflow
Thank you! only took me a couple hours to build :)
Ryzen 4070 himself, please un-bottleneck my pc
@@AAlgeriawhat😂
This video encouraged me to build my first. 2550$ on parts
Im here due to Sony announcing the PS5 Pro outrageous price for a non-physical drive. Im sure there will be someone else coming in behind me. Im putting my $700 towards a PC. I previously had a GTX 970 build years ago. So now im back on the PC market. Phew. Feels good to be back. I need a refresher. Thanks my man
I'm here for the same reason 😂
Crazy how Eggsy from kingsman told me how to build a PC in 15 minutes
That’s funny
Cheers eggsy lad
Wow this video blew the heck up. Great job!!
Thank you just wanted this perfect timing
5:15 These days, many M.2 SSD come with thermal putty already installed. In this case, you can CHOOSE whether to use the putty on the SSD card or on the motherboard's SSD cover... but don't use both. Peel one off completely and wipe the surface down with a bit of rubbing alcohol to remove any residue, then install the SSD, then put the cover on. You only need ONE layer of the thermal putty.
I’m building my pc in summer 2024 I will save this
Top video and top explanation - thanks ever so. I am super close to building my first PC and this video has given me a lot more confidence. I have also checked out your website and this will be my go-to reference site. Cheers.
Hey I was wondering if you could give me the parts you use for this build?
Man I wish I could afford a gaming pc! Looks sick!
Does each compartment include cables ?
Does the cables come with the patrs like those you connected to the cpu and gpu and psu?
im interested in building could you possibly reply with the links or names of the components
Saving this for later, ill make an edit when i do build one if i even order the parts
Any advice for where should I buy these components from? just go to the local stores(like best buy or micro center) or from amazon, ebay or smth like that?
Not sure if my comment got shadow blocked. Anyways, you buy parts wherever you can find the best de als.
@@JJFlores197 thanks appreciate that
Thank you so much I had no clue how to install my aio
This is a useful video, but watch it on half speed at times as it is a slightly ADHD performance. 😊
First time I built mine I forgot to plug in the power connector for the aio. I turned on the pc and watched as the cpu temp went from 0 F to 98F in about 10 seconds. Parents thought it was normal but I knew I that it was way to hot. Glad I knew my facts and didn’t listen to my parents.
I remember having something like that happen. I noticed that the temperatures kept getting random spikes, ultimately culminating in a failsafe system shutdown. Upon investigation, I found the problem - the CPU_FAN plug was only partially inserted. It was enough for the motherboard to accept the AIO pump, but not enough for the AIO pump to properly manage and detect the temperatures.
i've always wonder how do you like know all this stuff?do you have to study computer software or science to know all the specific types of CPU PSU or anything because im planning to start a pc building building business and i have only known the basics. please give me advice
lol. This has nothing to do with computer science. These are 2 very different fields. A lot of the PC builders on youtube are self-taught. You don't go to school to learn how to build PCs. A lot of us learned through trial and error and curiosity and determination. No one truly knows al the technical details about PCs. Its too complicated for the majority of people, even seasoned PC builders. Starting your own PC building business is going to be tough. Not to discourage you, but you have to see if it makes sense in your area. Building PCs is a niche market. If you can find the right market in your area, you may be ok, but it will be tough out there.
Nice video
you should tell the viewers just in case about the IO shield because some people wouldn't have the same motherboard as you just a tip
Damn late for this video mate, just finished building my baby 2 days ago :D
Where do you buy all of your builds?
thanks Im gonna build this for someones little brother so this will help a lot god bless you
Thank you it was really helpful I made my cousin happy thank you
Thanks a lot for this video. Used to build PCs back in the day so this video is awesome.
and anyone ever tell you you look like Tom Holland?
Since meeting you at a gaming festival, your vids have been very informative and great tuitions.
I'm finally looking at trying to upgrade my aging PC with new MB, CPU, RAM and AIO, but keeping my old case and fans. However, can I utilise my old M2 drive as my boot drive too? It'll have my win10 license. And with the new hardware should be a free upgrade to win11. Is this possible?
Nice! Keep up with it!
Where do u get the parts?
with cpu cooler, this is for most CPU coolers, some are push pins not a backplate attachment like the artic single flat fan coolers
Awesome video very helpful
Do all the parts come with all the screws and small miscellaneous stuff needed?
How many cameras do you need boss?
James: YES
Always great James! Thank you
Thanks my friend
Great video 🫡
Guys is this a good build?
Case: Antec Performance 1 FT
CPU: Intel® Core™ i5-14600K
GPU: ZOTAC Gaming GeForce RTX 4070 Ti
Mobo: ASUS Prime Z790-A WiFi 6E
RAM: CORSAIR VENGEANCE RGB DDR5 64GB (2x32GB) 6000MHz CL30
SSD: Samsung 990 PRO Series - 2TB Gen4
PSU: Cooler Master MWE Gold 850 V2
AIO: ARCTIC Liquid Freezer II 360
Good but cpu not bad i7 13700k good
Havent heard much good things about the whole 14th gen intel but i wouldnt know much just wanted to warned you just in case
@@Only1second therer is 2% differene between them i really don't know 🙂
@@StaySaltyAboutIt i think they are slightly better
I'd say 13th gen i7 but it's up to you tho
Did the case in the video come with fans for the front of the case or do you have to buy them seperatley
I watching This just For My First Job As pc Technician
do i need to buy wiring separately for the build or does it come with components like graphic card and motherboard?
The cables come with the respective parts.
@@JJFlores197 does a PSU come with the cables.
@@caiden6969 As I said, they come with the respective parts so yes the PSU comes with power cables. Now, if you're referring to extension power cables that a lot of tech build videos show, then no. Those are purely for aesthetics and have to be purchased separately.
@@JJFlores197 damn
Did he show how to plug in the pump for the AIO?
this is awesome😀
So its just as easy as clikcing them into the right spots? I thought soldering was involved. I might give this a gry. Ty
This is the way it has been for decades.
thanks so much
sucha perfect video
This is my first time building a pc. I still don’t understand, do the cases come with the black cords?
8:43 very nice 😂
set up guide after build your first pc 2021 👍
Great video
THANKS
Does the power supply come with the cables???????😊
Yes it comes with the relevant power cables.
CPU is most scary and esay to install
It’s great having a proper Brit telling me what to do instead of an American
ok imma build one now
Hi there but you know when he us talking about cables do you have to buy the cpu gpu motherboard and any other cables seperately or will they come in their own component box
The RGB cabling is always confusing. some cases don't have what was pictured here and you have to attach it to the mobo. It also doesn't help that the cables aren't labeled for us newbies! The RGB is really the only confusing aspect of the build to me. Troubleshooting the BIOS is a whole other story!
should we buy the cables separately or do we get it along with the psu?
They come with the psu
great video
The video being 15 minutes doesn't mean the build is gonna take 15 minutes. My first PC build, with the help of tutorials and manuals, took 14 hours!
I have a budget but idk the right components to buy and I want good performance for Fortnite 240 fps
Just make sure it’s the 500 dollar build video not any of the other one unless that’s your budget.
750 dollars and you will be good
What about the therma paste
5:20 is that gonna come with the storage or u have to buy it
I have i5 9600kf with a 3060ti and i want to upgrade, should i go for 7 7800x3d? to pair with my gpu, maybe in a year i upgrage the gpu
hey, a little late here but no, the 7800x3d is even more expensive than the 3060ti itself and it will be such an uneven combo that it will bottleneck(underperform) basically get a cheaper cpu like the 5800x3d because its the same peformance
How much roughly is this build??
Lemon squeezy!!!
Thanks a lot 🙏🏿 👍🏾🗣
Hey Geeka instead of how much budget do you have, how much do you REALLY need to play games in 2023/24 so people don't actually spend their entire budget... Toughts?
It depends on what kind of games you want to play at what resolution and at what desired frame rate. The needs of 4k 144fps is going to be very different to 1080p 60 fps. You could play at 720p to maximise budget. If you can tolerate potato spec play then you can build a potato spec PC.
@@Safetytrousers ah then he should make it as sections imo? He doesn't have to build it i guess?
my case has 4 inbuilt fans and I am thinking of getting a ryzen 5 7600 ( that comes with a stock cooler) Is it enough for the cpu, 32gb of ram and an rtx 4060?
@RockRust the cpu is good but the stock cooler wont be enough
@@UMGROXY Thanks. What are some collers that you would recommend?
@@RockRust do you want liquid or air cooler
@@UMGROXY Probably an air cooler
@@UMGROXY is the Thermalright Peerless Assassin 120 SE ARGB a good choice?
Is the RX 7800 XT go with B550m Aorus elite?
Things that people will never tell cabinet fans fan hub is quite cheap buy it it's easy to manage cable at a single point individual to motherboard argb connectors can't be painfull and sync them too .
Supoose you have normal RGB fans and no argb you don't care much just want cooling. Most cases when buying a cheaper cabinet fans or older ones you may not have the proper connector put it with the PSU molex connectors and stacks it or stack it and use a unused sata pin.
Check your motherboard properly for what is the front panel connector for power and restart
Like Msi the physical never matched the onnline one. Read what's written on the Mobo.
Power and re-start pins and the argb header can look similar until you look close don't try to push it it won't fix there you may break it .
I thanks msi fir one thing highlightimg the pump header for AIO with metal stainless thing covering it .
Unless gigabyte fight to find what is what they're manual in box throw it in Dustin and read the onnline one .
Are PC components better protected with static electricity these days???
Seems easy I’m fucking ready thanks
1 thing i always see if most people miss out wiring for the aio.
What case is this? Can you list the parts please?
guess wich part he talked about the most? the fricking cooler
There should be 9 core components; you forgot the fans (the CPU cooler alone isn't enough to keep your whole PC cool enough).
Does an air cpu cooler need thermal paste?
yes.