Wednesday, April 15, 2009

Repair

Learned how to jumper a power supply as to test without using the motherboard. Made it easy to tell that my first customer's power supply had bit the dust. Thank goodness for local PC shops to supply a 500w power supply for only $20.

The business hasn't yet become a "Business" but once the word gets out, perhaps I will be able to get more people to see the potential in custom built systems as opposed to Dell, HP, Gateway, and all those other companies that over-charge you.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

What's in your arsenal?

So I decided to take the leap and start my own business on the side, out of my apartment. It's a simple PC design business, get the facts, build the machines, get a little extra dough on the side. After a long time of deciding a name I came up with 'Arsenal'. For many people, computers are necessary part of their lives and you have to have something in your computing arsenal to conquer those daily tasks. So I will be designing and building custom PC's. I will also offer up my services to anyone in need of an upgrade or repair.

A few notes on my own machine: I came in to possession of some a 2 GB stick of PC6400 RAM. The RAM was given to me by a fellow computer guru who removed it from another PC. After dropping in the stick, I heard a variety of beeps in sequence. Basically my computer was saying "What the fuck is this new crap you are putting in me!" Well, after some thought, I figure perhaps since my current RAM is timed at 5-5-5-15 and my new RAM is timed at 6-6-6-12, maybe I should switch my computer to automatically choose the right timing, as opposed to trying to run the new RAM at the old timing, woops! If everything goes correctly, she should run 4GB's at 6-6-6-15.

Saturday, April 11, 2009

A+

Certification in the works? Maybe... A+ by CompTIA, the IT Technician one... Repairing computer systems or building new ones... it's kinda fun. Starting my own computer design company... perhaps it's in the works. The certification would help out. Either way, I like to build things.

Tuesday, April 7, 2009

Results are in!

My computer sounds a little like an airplane about to take off, especially with 3 case fans, the Buffalo Heatsink/Fan, and the VGA cooler on my HD Radeon 3870. However, without even touching a water cooling block I've managed to reach temperature levels way way below a normal air-cooled machine, go me! For those not into the technicaly side of things, the average air-cooled machine will idle anywhere from 40-50*C. Well... you've seen my numbers in the last post.

I did have to step down my processor from 2.6GHz to 2.5GHz to prevent some in-game crashing. I'd increase the voltage if my Asus board would let me. In the end, she's still powerful enough to play any game on the market. I don't see anything becoming available that wil be able to fully utilize a quad core processor, especially the Core i7. So, with that note, long live the Athlon 64 X2!

Monday, April 6, 2009

Update Complete!





Some photos of the new update. Added components include an Evercool Buffalo Heatsink, a Kama Bay 3x5.25" slot case/fan grill, and a 120mm Thermaltake Thunderblade Fan. Notice the idle temperature on the CPU as well as the case temperature:

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Victoria's Introduction

My computer may need it's own introduction being the brains of my operations. Born in February of 2008, Victoria hosts an overclocked AMD Athlon 64 X2 4200+, 2GB of G.Skill PC6400 RAM timed at 5-5-5-15, an Asus Micro ATX motherboard, an ATi Radeon HD 3870 by Sapphire, a Samsung DVD-R Burner with Lightscribe, and a 300GB Seagate Ultra-ATA100 hardrive with 16MB cache. All these goods are stored in an Atrix case powered by 480-watts of magic. As of this Friday (April 3rd), a few more additions will be added. A couple of 120mm case fans will be installed to create the proper airflow through the case as well as an Evercool Buffalo Heatsink to cool down the overclocked 4200+. If everything goes to plan, I should be idling below 30* C without a hitch.