@Dontget_mad with my case, there are I think 3-4 provisions to mount the riser cable, I've used the middle so that the gpu isn't too close to the side panel, but now I wanted to move it even closer to the motherboard but I've already made a support bracket for it's current location so now I'll have to make a another one. Even though the card has support at the pci io bracket and on the riser cable with it's standoffs I'd prefer to support at the end of the card too as it's now since these aorus master cards are unnecessarily too large and heavy
Better for the motherboard if you're uninterested in a sag bracket, looks pretty cool. Probably already been done, but glass with holes in it for the same airflow but visible would be pretty nifty. Not very fun to clean or handle I'd imagine tho.
Without ZTT and CarterPcs I would still be figuring out how to turn on a computer, now because of these two I can make a great pc off the top of my head. Thank you Zach and Carter, because now I know the difference between a usb and a power cable. Edit: 100 likes?!? Thank you everybody!!! 🎉
So i did a LianLi Sup01 Build a week ago... That is an actuall performance and Temps BEAST! Take a look at that thing! I built maybe 50 PCs now and repaired a ton more but this case was so nice to build in, definetly in the Top 5 Cases all time. 8.5/10 Temps, 9.5/10 Looks, 9/10 Ease of building, 10/10 creativity
You have to also consider the orientation of the fin stack. Some cards will have a finstack that horizontally dissipate air towards the IO and back of the GPU. While many newer cards have taken the vertical design where the fins dissipate hot air out the sides of the GPU. Vertically mounting the GPU will allow bottom fans to push out through the GPU and dissipate heat faster. You have to consider your fan configuration, your case, and of course your GPU fin stack before moving to a vertical mount set up.
Another side note. If you want to vertically mount your gpu consider your case as a factor. If you are keeping an old case with no fans on the bottom and no room against the glass its going to have a bad time. But if you get any case with some bottom mounted fans you will be just fine regardless of hom much space is against the glass. Thise fams can either help push fresh air through the gpu or pull it down through the heat sink. Veryically mounting is just fine if there is room against the glass and or fans below. If you have neither id recommend just getting a nicer case first anyway because itll do you wonders for those aesthetics without dropping your performance
I have a LC Power Gaming 900B - Lumaxx Gloom ATX case and it's very unique when it comes to the design, a total of 10 slots for case fans 3 that are an intake on the side go directly into the GPU, the rest are regular 3 slots on top, 3 on the front and one in the back, with the power button located under the 3 side intake fans, which is very practical if you keep it on the desk
Vertical mounts also put no strain on the mobo’s PCIe slot, which can be a problem for some heavy cards and/or cheap mobos. I had a Gigabyte mobo’s (never buying them again) PCIe slot separate from the mobo with just a standard 1070 Ti hanging on it…
Be aware that many mounting kits have supporting plates that will block the exhaust of 1-2 fans on the gpu, for example the Cooler Master V3. This can hurt both performance and acoustics, especially if the gpu fans have poor static pressure.
My temps go straight up when I close the side panel on my vertically mounted gpu. I shoved a 4090 in a corsair 4000D. Works great only with side panel off.
@T-Minus10s it runs 65c all day at 100 util with the side panel off. Might need power but it also has a big ass cooler. It didn't have a temp problem with regular mounting I just wanted it vertical
3rd Option: vertical mount with custom CPU + GPU water cooling loop. Air flow towards card itself less of a problem. PS: My card and mainboard still gets air from below directly from 2 fans. 2x360 radiators - 1 in the front, 1 on top plus 1 exhaust fan in the back. XL case though, I hate these tiny cases, makes mounting everthing easier and air flow is also easier to control.
If you take the charcoal mesh from an air filter and put over the intakes you can filter out a fair amount of dust and hair without restricting air flow. But more finer dust will still get in.
I use the NZXT H6 Flow case, which has two 140mm intake fans on the floor pointing straight up at the GPU so I just figured that it would be better to mount my 4090 horizontally to take advantage of that airflow.
I don't want sag and I think the vertical position is neat for air to go around the back and front of the gpu kinda like a sandwich of cool air passing up and throught the gpu and pushing the hot air away from the gpu to the top of the case
Because I'm a nerd I watch many repair videos. Alot of people that repair gpus are having to core and memory reballs. Mounting vertically can take a lot of pressure off the core and memory. Especially with the big coolers. Also heat kills them. So mount vertically and under volt, for gpu longevity.
I think if you have the O11 vision then horizontally mounting your gpu with bottom intake fans is a pretty good setup. I rarely see my 4080super go over 60c
I had to vertical mount my card because I was leaking fps from the top corner! Once I vertical mounted the leak was above my fps threshold and I was able to get all my fps and efficiency!
As long as it isn't butted up the the glass and impacts the air that's allowed. However it's important to remember that not all cards cool the same way. Looking at you induction fans. What you should do however is make sure your card is supported. Both vertically and horizontally especially with the new larger cards that weigh a fukton
What about a case where the motherboard is rotated 90 degrees? Like the IO is at the top of the case. Hot air rises, right? Wouldn't that be better generally for air flow?
Depends on the case/fan setup For example, in my old Lian Li 011 Dynamic, from horizontal to vertical gpu it was around a 10c difference since my bottom fans were intakes and top fans were exhaust
I would use vertical for a micro atx motherboard 😭😭 since it would cover up the ugliness of one in an atx case but also to make it possible to use a graphics card that dose not fit the motherboard since it covers everything
In short yes it better because if you dont have support on the end of the card the card bends the PCI express port by its own weight, I have seen it persnally on GTX 1080Ti Aorus where I needed to put somethink under it
hey, i am getting ready to build my first PC. since im on a budget i chose these specs: CPU: core i5 12400f GPU: rtx 3050 8GB card Motherboard: Gigabyte h610m Memory: 16GB DDR4 Storage: 1tb Nvme Power supply: MSI Mag A650BN Case: Montech Air 100 If Zack cant respond someone please tell me if there is anything wrong with my build Also the games im planning to play are Fortnite and PCVR games like Half Life Alyx
Not for my pc case when in horizontal the card is 12 degrees cooler and clocks higher as a result. Also fans aren’t at 100% anymore so it’s more quiet, so I’ll keep it that way. It didn’t matter for my 1060 but these issues started since I bought my 3070.
Technically, mounting the card vertically will _always_ have a negative effect on performance. The vertical mounting requires the use of a riser, which adds a tiny bit of latency alongside the few centimeters offset. It's only a delay of a few nanoseconds, but it can still knock a few frames off your top-end.
For me, vertical mount for these reasons 1. Bottom fans blow straight through the fin stack. 2. Less strain on the PCI-E connector (still less strain than horizontal + anti sag bracket) 3. And obviously the looks. For me it's just about prevention with these huge 40 series cards, don't want to struggle with RMA and then getting denied due to physical damage
Not necessarily bro, if you vertically mount in a deep enough case using a good quality vertical mounting solution like Lian Li that was not intended for this application, you can avoid it being anyplace near the glass. I used a Montech air X ARGB case and a Lian Li vertical mount on mine man and my GPU sits i bet 4 inches from the front glass away form it, and closer to the motherboard. It depends on the mounting solution used and the depth of the case used Zack. Some of the cases that actually have a spot to mount just a riser cable, have the position to mount the riser cable to close to the glass and those are all shit! So you just have to make sure to use an after market vertical mounting solution that actually slides in the slot cover area of your case and gets screwed in to it and make sure that you use a deep enough full ATX case with 6 or more slot covers. I can send you pics if you want to see what I done with mine and what I mean by all of this if you are confused.
I've run my system like that for some years now man with the MSI RTX 3060ti gaming trio and the answer to your question is yes it stays very cool, but it must be mounted properly, with enough clearance.
If you have a side intake on your PC case and your GPU sticks out in to that airway then you're also going to have opposing air flows. The flow from the intake case fans and one of the fans on the GPU will be opposing eachother. You also need to take in to account your heat sink fin stack. A 40__ FE has a finstack designed for horizontal and if you mount vertically then air flow will be worse, especially with bottom intake case fans. Honestly, if you have money for a 90 series card I believe you also have the time and money to make a custom loop too and if that's the case then I say vertically mount it so you can show off your work.
if you gpu is too close to glass it cause lack of air flow and get 5c more hotter unless gpu is closer to mobo away from wall yah but it better have it on mobo unset of on case because i find them come into problem with other card in slot under it
Hey Zach, I'm trying to decide between the 4070 super and the 7900 gre. I looked at your chart and they look the same. The gre is a little cheaper but I want to know which one is more powerful and can get me the highest fps with modern games. I don't really care about pricing because they are about the same. My cpu is a ryzen 7 7000x. Thanks
It will come down to what do you want exactly. Raw performance most likely will be on AMDs side, but when it comes to things like Ray tracing or DLSS Nvidia will be better. At least as far as it normally goes
PC building question: can I pair a mid-range CPU with a high end motherboard and vice versa. I might build my first PC soon and I asked it because of future proofing.
Some CPUs have internal graphics so if your gpu dies then you have a backup. And usually when ever you plug the hdmi cable to your motherboard there is no display unless plugged into the gpu. If your gpu dies or breaks and you want to use internal graphics, where do you plug the hdmi cable in?
I tried it and I had a difference of 3 degrees Celsius in the vertical version, so the card was installed 3 degrees colder than normal, so hardly any difference and from the performance ... I didn't notice any difference and the FPS counter was also at the same value
Personally, I prefer horizontal, but I see reasons why some people would use veritical mount. BTW does anyone owns Ryzen 7 5800X, and what temps you usually get?
I do NOT spend my time looking inside of my case.. my glass is tinted DARK from the factory.. NO RGB there and I really don't care about it. The action is on the screen. ( Case is Corsair D400 AF with all Beige and Brown fans and a D 15. Not the point but still)
If I want an matching Set of Fans for my asthetic build, wich brand do you recommend going with for the aio, fans and reverse fansß Not too expensive obviously
I can understand if you vertical mount because of space constraint & performance/thermal reasons But vertical mounted GPUs are so ugly, idk why people keeps doing this for aesthetic reason. The only advantage I see from deliberate vertical mount is hiding the cables, but that can be solved with extensions and better cable management.
With, some vertical mounts you can push the graphics card back. I just learned that
Haha same. Litterally 3 minutes ago
@Dontget_mad with my case, there are I think 3-4 provisions to mount the riser cable, I've used the middle so that the gpu isn't too close to the side panel, but now I wanted to move it even closer to the motherboard but I've already made a support bracket for it's current location so now I'll have to make a another one. Even though the card has support at the pci io bracket and on the riser cable with it's standoffs I'd prefer to support at the end of the card too as it's now since these aorus master cards are unnecessarily too large and heavy
Me with a 3 slot card 😢
Me having 3080 with i7 sandybridge:3080 chilling with 55c cuz cpu is damn slow😂
I dont need case fan to cool i tested
Zack is goated fr i was thinking about this to
Better for the motherboard if you're uninterested in a sag bracket, looks pretty cool. Probably already been done, but glass with holes in it for the same airflow but visible would be pretty nifty. Not very fun to clean or handle I'd imagine tho.
Sounds expensive too lol
The only reason to vertically mount your GPU in that case would be aesthetics, which would pretty much be ruined by the holes in the side panel IMO.
Without ZTT and CarterPcs I would still be figuring out how to turn on a computer, now because of these two I can make a great pc off the top of my head. Thank you Zach and Carter, because now I know the difference between a usb and a power cable. Edit: 100 likes?!? Thank you everybody!!! 🎉
You'd still have Linus 🎉
You dumb or you're exaggerating
we all know ur lying bcuz carter pcs doesnt even make pc content lol
CarterPCs is kind of a massive idiot though so I wouldn't take advice from the guy got soap into his iphone while in the shower
@@ziutekLOVEplackifr lmao
So i did a LianLi Sup01 Build a week ago... That is an actuall performance and Temps BEAST! Take a look at that thing! I built maybe 50 PCs now and repaired a ton more but this case was so nice to build in, definetly in the Top 5 Cases all time. 8.5/10 Temps, 9.5/10 Looks, 9/10 Ease of building, 10/10 creativity
Thank you for bringing back childhood memories.
You have to also consider the orientation of the fin stack. Some cards will have a finstack that horizontally dissipate air towards the IO and back of the GPU. While many newer cards have taken the vertical design where the fins dissipate hot air out the sides of the GPU. Vertically mounting the GPU will allow bottom fans to push out through the GPU and dissipate heat faster. You have to consider your fan configuration, your case, and of course your GPU fin stack before moving to a vertical mount set up.
Another side note. If you want to vertically mount your gpu consider your case as a factor. If you are keeping an old case with no fans on the bottom and no room against the glass its going to have a bad time. But if you get any case with some bottom mounted fans you will be just fine regardless of hom much space is against the glass. Thise fams can either help push fresh air through the gpu or pull it down through the heat sink. Veryically mounting is just fine if there is room against the glass and or fans below. If you have neither id recommend just getting a nicer case first anyway because itll do you wonders for those aesthetics without dropping your performance
I'm really happy with my case. PSU at the top, additional bottom case fans. Works amazingly.
I have a LC Power Gaming 900B - Lumaxx Gloom ATX case and it's very unique when it comes to the design, a total of 10 slots for case fans 3 that are an intake on the side go directly into the GPU, the rest are regular 3 slots on top, 3 on the front and one in the back, with the power button located under the 3 side intake fans, which is very practical if you keep it on the desk
Zach: Aesthetics vs Performance Above All. Custom Wires, Paint, and RBG haaands down
I like the new Thermaltake cases like the tower 300 where the motherboard is rotated 90° and the video card hangs in an up and down position.
You should make a build guide including a monitor to add to the budget
Vertical mounts also put no strain on the mobo’s PCIe slot, which can be a problem for some heavy cards and/or cheap mobos. I had a Gigabyte mobo’s (never buying them again) PCIe slot separate from the mobo with just a standard 1070 Ti hanging on it…
Be aware that many mounting kits have supporting plates that will block the exhaust of 1-2 fans on the gpu, for example the Cooler Master V3. This can hurt both performance and acoustics, especially if the gpu fans have poor static pressure.
-Cooler Master V3
-Supporting plates
-Supporting plates block the exhaust of 1 to 2 fans on the gpu?
What?
My temps go straight up when I close the side panel on my vertically mounted gpu. I shoved a 4090 in a corsair 4000D. Works great only with side panel off.
Well yeah it’s a power hungry 4090 🤣
@T-Minus10s it runs 65c all day at 100 util with the side panel off. Might need power but it also has a big ass cooler. It didn't have a temp problem with regular mounting I just wanted it vertical
3rd Option: vertical mount with custom CPU + GPU water cooling loop. Air flow towards card itself less of a problem.
PS: My card and mainboard still gets air from below directly from 2 fans. 2x360 radiators - 1 in the front, 1 on top plus 1 exhaust fan in the back. XL case though, I hate these tiny cases, makes mounting everthing easier and air flow is also easier to control.
If you take the charcoal mesh from an air filter and put over the intakes you can filter out a fair amount of dust and hair without restricting air flow. But more finer dust will still get in.
I feel like it just depends on the case the most. And how much room it has.
There’s a 3ʳᵈ option: get a case where the mobo I/O is located at the top of the case. Thermaltake Tower Series is a great option.
I use the NZXT H6 Flow case, which has two 140mm intake fans on the floor pointing straight up at the GPU so I just figured that it would be better to mount my 4090 horizontally to take advantage of that airflow.
I don't want sag and I think the vertical position is neat for air to go around the back and front of the gpu kinda like a sandwich of cool air passing up and throught the gpu and pushing the hot air away from the gpu to the top of the case
i know a 20 series founders edition card would look good vertically i immediately finished at the sight of it
Because I'm a nerd I watch many repair videos. Alot of people that repair gpus are having to core and memory reballs. Mounting vertically can take a lot of pressure off the core and memory. Especially with the big coolers. Also heat kills them. So mount vertically and under volt, for gpu longevity.
Congrats on 800k 👀👀👀
I think if you have the O11 vision then horizontally mounting your gpu with bottom intake fans is a pretty good setup. I rarely see my 4080super go over 60c
I had to vertical mount my card because I was leaking fps from the top corner! Once I vertical mounted the leak was above my fps threshold and I was able to get all my fps and efficiency!
As long as it isn't butted up the the glass and impacts the air that's allowed.
However it's important to remember that not all cards cool the same way. Looking at you induction fans. What you should do however is make sure your card is supported. Both vertically and horizontally especially with the new larger cards that weigh a fukton
It’s also good if you have a smaller case
What about a case where the motherboard is rotated 90 degrees? Like the IO is at the top of the case. Hot air rises, right? Wouldn't that be better generally for air flow?
My case is rack mount, so vertical graphics mount is the standard because the motherboard's horizontal.
Biggest thing I tell people that I’ve never seen someone say is take the side glass off while gaming if your going to be gaming for a long time
For some itx builds it's way hotter to have it vertical, because otherwise you wouldn't have a GPU.
My first real gaming PC is in a Hyte Y70 with a vertical mount..I feel that it's far enough from the glass to not hurt performance
Depends on the case/fan setup
For example, in my old Lian Li 011 Dynamic, from horizontal to vertical gpu it was around a 10c difference since my bottom fans were intakes and top fans were exhaust
10c higher or lower?
@@damonmeng7888 lower
I would use vertical for a micro atx motherboard 😭😭 since it would cover up the ugliness of one in an atx case but also to make it possible to use a graphics card that dose not fit the motherboard since it covers everything
In short yes it better because if you dont have support on the end of the card the card bends the PCI express port by its own weight, I have seen it persnally on GTX 1080Ti Aorus where I needed to put somethink under it
hey, i am getting ready to build my first PC. since im on a budget i chose these specs:
CPU: core i5 12400f
GPU: rtx 3050 8GB card
Motherboard: Gigabyte h610m
Memory: 16GB DDR4
Storage: 1tb Nvme
Power supply: MSI Mag A650BN
Case: Montech Air 100
If Zack cant respond someone please tell me if there is anything wrong with my build
Also the games im planning to play are Fortnite and PCVR games like Half Life Alyx
Replace 3050 with a used 3060 12GB atleast
@@AlexHusTech are there any other cheaper options im kinda broke💀
@@Al3x_YT26 RX 6600 used?
@@AlexHusTech I can afford a new 6600 and ty for recommendations
@@Al3x_YT26 Check out 2060 Super as well
Not for my pc case when in horizontal the card is 12 degrees cooler and clocks higher as a result. Also fans aren’t at 100% anymore so it’s more quiet, so I’ll keep it that way.
It didn’t matter for my 1060 but these issues started since I bought my 3070.
Technically, mounting the card vertically will _always_ have a negative effect on performance. The vertical mounting requires the use of a riser, which adds a tiny bit of latency alongside the few centimeters offset. It's only a delay of a few nanoseconds, but it can still knock a few frames off your top-end.
I'm more interested on that ROG Strix GPU case on the third image
Just open your case 🗿
So the riser doesnt have any effect since you are effectively moving it further away from the board?
For me, vertical mount for these reasons
1. Bottom fans blow straight through the fin stack.
2. Less strain on the PCI-E connector (still less strain than horizontal + anti sag bracket)
3. And obviously the looks.
For me it's just about prevention with these huge 40 series cards, don't want to struggle with RMA and then getting denied due to physical damage
Agreed, if you've got those bottom fans available in your case, then go vertical.
Number one is highly dependent on cooler design as well.
Hey Zack, is it okay to have my Pc in an Air Conditioned room? I've heard horror stories about condensation and wet components 😨
Good thing my 3 fan gpu is mounted from the top to bottom vertically and not the back to front horizontally horizontally
Aestetics every second every day wooo
Not necessarily bro, if you vertically mount in a deep enough case using a good quality vertical mounting solution like Lian Li that was not intended for this application, you can avoid it being anyplace near the glass. I used a Montech air X ARGB case and a Lian Li vertical mount on mine man and my GPU sits i bet 4 inches from the front glass away form it, and closer to the motherboard. It depends on the mounting solution used and the depth of the case used Zack. Some of the cases that actually have a spot to mount just a riser cable, have the position to mount the riser cable to close to the glass and those are all shit! So you just have to make sure to use an after market vertical mounting solution that actually slides in the slot cover area of your case and gets screwed in to it and make sure that you use a deep enough full ATX case with 6 or more slot covers. I can send you pics if you want to see what I done with mine and what I mean by all of this if you are confused.
I've run my system like that for some years now man with the MSI RTX 3060ti gaming trio and the answer to your question is yes it stays very cool, but it must be mounted properly, with enough clearance.
Both my 4090 builds run at a max of 45°c, and thats in the winter when my ac unit is off which they are connected to
Can you use any ddr4 3200 ram for ddr4 cpus, or do you have to use specific XMP/ DOCP memory?
My hot take is that I don't like how vertically mounted GPUs look.
Quick Question: Is a Ryzen 7 7700x and an rtx 4070 a good pair for 1080p or should I invest in a 1440p monitor instead
4070 is a 1440p card unless you play report titles on high FPS at 1080p
Ive vertical mounted my gpu and it works just how i wanted it to
602Pa had glass panel with holes for vertical mount gpu intake.
If you have a side intake on your PC case and your GPU sticks out in to that airway then you're also going to have opposing air flows. The flow from the intake case fans and one of the fans on the GPU will be opposing eachother.
You also need to take in to account your heat sink fin stack. A 40__ FE has a finstack designed for horizontal and if you mount vertically then air flow will be worse, especially with bottom intake case fans.
Honestly, if you have money for a 90 series card I believe you also have the time and money to make a custom loop too and if that's the case then I say vertically mount it so you can show off your work.
Is an Intel core i7 8850h better than an Intel core i5 13400F?
Hey ZTT, I have plans on a RTX 4070 you and Ryzen 7 7800x3d build, is this a good match for 1440-4k gaming? Thanks
my 3080ti was badly overheating being placed vertically.. the difference between almost 70 and almost 80 degrees + noice made me place it normally
Ryzen 4070 doesnt have these issues, it just floats and doesnt need power connectors since its connected via Bluetooth
However, the space that fans need in front of them to suck in air is actually small. I think 1 or 2 centimetres away from the side panel is just fine
Vertical is so aesthetically good but I'm having performance issues like black screen then comes back and my pc freezes most of the time
i wish all gpus have the feature to bend the connectors 60 degrees.
The do! But only once
or simply, verticle mount with removed side panel
I have a ITX motherboard in an E-ATX Case and I am now gonna buy a RTX 3060 and mount it vertically
[I have a 4th gen i5 (4590s)]
For me I have a different vertical. My case is the segotop Phoenix T1. Mines COMPLETELY VERTICAL. Not rotated.
Zach, should I get an RGB hub to control all of my fans, or should I daisy chain the cables?
Sure you can use your graphics card as air deduster! But you may have to clean it every 2-3 days then :)
That’s why he’s the best
if you gpu is too close to glass it cause lack of air flow and get 5c more hotter
unless gpu is closer to mobo away from wall yah but it better have it on mobo unset of on case because i find them come into problem with other card in slot under it
If you have a gigabyte 4000 series (4070 ti and higher ), specially early version… STRONGLY recommend you vertically mount it or it will crack
Pls say For 4070 super horizontal or vertical
And pls say which one is better gigabyte Windforce or super eagle or aero or super gaming. Which modle is good than rest.
@@PradeepKumar-tq4ev 4070 is not an issue
@@Opekillz means I did not get u
Wouldn't be more efficient if you used water cooling CPU fan and mounted the GPU on the top roof of the case?
my motherboard is just turned 90* to the left so my gpu has near optimal air intake
I rather have a good connection between my motherboard and pci-e slot than depend on some crappy made risers that may or may not last a year or so
Some times it’s also doubles as a sack bracket
Short 189 for zachs pc box wall art
If youre not severely overclocking your GPU then it literally doesnt matter. Thats why those cooling contraptions are so chonky.
Hey Zach, I'm trying to decide between the 4070 super and the 7900 gre. I looked at your chart and they look the same. The gre is a little cheaper but I want to know which one is more powerful and can get me the highest fps with modern games. I don't really care about pricing because they are about the same. My cpu is a ryzen 7 7000x. Thanks
I went with the 7900xt and it has been amazing so far ultra 1440p msfs ultra settings 1440p every game
It will come down to what do you want exactly. Raw performance most likely will be on AMDs side, but when it comes to things like Ray tracing or DLSS Nvidia will be better. At least as far as it normally goes
PC building question: can I pair a mid-range CPU with a high end motherboard and vice versa. I might build my first PC soon and I asked it because of future proofing.
Now the conflict comes with vapour chamber GPUs. They need to be mounted horizontally
id do verticle due to gpu's sag factor
Some CPUs have internal graphics so if your gpu dies then you have a backup. And usually when ever you plug the hdmi cable to your motherboard there is no display unless plugged into the gpu. If your gpu dies or breaks and you want to use internal graphics, where do you plug the hdmi cable in?
If your Psu is on the bottom of the case, then the gpu will intake hot air from the Psu
On this topic can you do a video doing pros and cons of the lian li o11 vision
I tried it and I had a difference of 3 degrees Celsius in the vertical version, so the card was installed 3 degrees colder than normal, so hardly any difference and from the performance ... I didn't notice any difference and the FPS counter was also at the same value
i think he meant vertical like the mounting bracket on the top
i use a lian li xl with virtical mount. My gpu is way back because i moved the mount for pcie, ive got 2 inches between gpu and glass
So I basically have ztt aprova to make my first pc with a vertical GPU !!!!
YEAAAAA!!!!
So wb the y60/y70?
The PS5 vertical problem could happen if someone was using liquid metal on their GPU.
Vertical mounting GPU’s is better if you have a heavy card that sags a lot
Other words if you got the room mounted any way you want it.
And what if you have a big case and you can have a good space between the glass and the fans ?
Personally, I prefer horizontal, but I see reasons why some people would use veritical mount. BTW does anyone owns Ryzen 7 5800X, and what temps you usually get?
hey ! i had a question what are your pc builds named after on ztt website ? (kinda wondering if ur a wow player 😄)
That evga is do sexy. It’s such a shame.
The main of motherboards have pci port on horizontal.
I do NOT spend my time looking inside of my case.. my glass is tinted DARK from the factory.. NO RGB there and I really don't care about it. The action is on the screen. ( Case is Corsair D400 AF with all Beige and Brown fans and a D 15. Not the point but still)
can you make a video about the cheapest future proof (or proofable) gaming PC?
ryzen 7600 cpu and ddr5 6000 speed ram as the core parts and enough wattage in the power supply for a better cpu and a gpu
If I want an matching Set of Fans for my asthetic build, wich brand do you recommend going with for the aio, fans and reverse fansß Not too expensive obviously
I can understand if you vertical mount because of space constraint & performance/thermal reasons
But vertical mounted GPUs are so ugly, idk why people keeps doing this for aesthetic reason. The only advantage I see from deliberate vertical mount is hiding the cables, but that can be solved with extensions and better cable management.