Common PC Building Mistakes that Beginners Make!

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  • čas přidán 21. 01. 2021
  • Here are the most common PC Building mistakes I see when people are building their first PCs! Don't let these happen to you!
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  • Věda a technologie

Komentáře • 12K

  • @scottgardiner7418
    @scottgardiner7418 Před 3 lety +7261

    Exceeding the budget is my most common mistake

    • @Bayouman1966
      @Bayouman1966 Před 3 lety +292

      Yea, my first build I set a $1500 budget but by the end the system ended up costing $2100 , I went with 32 GB Ram instead of 16 & so forth, but I like the system I now have.

    • @awsomeboy360
      @awsomeboy360 Před 3 lety +67

      Mines was also 1500. Ended up around $1700,

    • @PANCHO15108
      @PANCHO15108 Před 3 lety +90

      Same I had a $1500 I think I spent well over $2400. My first ever build so I had to get all the other non negotiables that I didn't account for. Keyboard, mouse... MONITOR!! LOL. Plus I couldn't get a 3080 so I've been spending my money on RGB. I'm well past $2700 now.... I need my 3080 already 😭😭😭😭

    • @justsomeperson5110
      @justsomeperson5110 Před 3 lety +6

      LOL Isn't it always though?

    • @Doomsdayparade
      @Doomsdayparade Před 3 lety +6

      Before the rampant censorship and my move to Linux I was the same way lol.

  • @ragtop63
    @ragtop63 Před 3 lety +6866

    Build Tip:
    Lay your case on its side when assembling. Stop trying to fight gravity. Don't be Linus.

    • @brykit1972
      @brykit1972 Před 3 lety +251

      I’ve wondered why he does that.

    • @TehObLiVioUs
      @TehObLiVioUs Před 3 lety +530

      @@brykit1972 let me guess, better on camera?! I BET

    • @Mindseas
      @Mindseas Před 3 lety +43

      YES, thank you!

    • @ragtop63
      @ragtop63 Před 3 lety +82

      @@TehObLiVioUs Their sets have overhead cameras.

    • @sobzuk
      @sobzuk Před 3 lety +202

      But then you can drop stuff and do 'hilarious' thumbnails for vids

  • @Senseimatty81
    @Senseimatty81 Před rokem +955

    HVAC engineer here with 15 years experience in the aerospace industry. All ventilation tips here are very accurate! Well done!

    • @pix_p
      @pix_p Před rokem +7

      A Question if you dont mind: Wouldn't it be better to match how many intake vs. exhaust fans you have or have 1-2 more intake vs exhaust?
      My thinking:
      More intake then exhaust: slightly higher pressure inside the case -> air will get out whatever way provides least resistance
      More exhaust then intake: slightly lower pressure inside the case -> air will try to get in from places other then the installed fans which might result in higher dust buildup.

    • @Senseimatty81
      @Senseimatty81 Před rokem +30

      @@pix_p you want the airflow to follow a specific path so the idea of having airflow following whatever way out is not efficient for cooling. Pc casing got a often intake grills far from components so it's better to suck fresh air from these locations and drive it to the hot spots with extracting fans so you're sure that hot air is going out quickly without flowing around other hot areas which could contribute to additional heating.

    • @pix_p
      @pix_p Před rokem +3

      @@Senseimatty81 Sorry I should have been more clear with my Question. Yes you are right, making the Air follow a nice Path is optimal (for Example front in and back out), but what I am trying to figure out is that wouldn't it be better to have let's say 3 intake Fans at the front and only 2 exhaust at the rear?
      That way you can be sure that all Air sucked into the Case will ONLY be coming from the front Fans which optimally would have a Filter of some sort in front of them.
      When using 2 Intake Fans and 3 Exhaust Fans, the Case might have a slightly lower pressure inside which would result in Air entering the Case from other (non-Filtered) Openings.

    • @Senseimatty81
      @Senseimatty81 Před rokem +27

      @@pix_p For heat exchange is better more air out because the extraction fans are located close to the components so you are sure that the hot air will not stay inside but it will leave asap. More air in might become hot (or not contributing to heat exchange) and remains inside longer.
      Dust will enter in the case anyway, the filters are not so effective as they say, otherwise you would need much more powerful fans to blow through them. I suggest to clean the inside of the pc with a small vacuum cleaner or blowing with a compressor time to time.

    • @pix_p
      @pix_p Před rokem +12

      ​@@Senseimatty81 Ok thanks for clearing that up! (and also for taking the time to answer random Strangers Questions on the Internet :D)

  • @reallauradee
    @reallauradee Před rokem +1106

    Number one tip that I learned is to watch a ton of videos before even buying a single piece of hardware, that way we don't have to send it back and wait even longer for the right parts.

    • @Chris.Brisson
      @Chris.Brisson Před rokem +146

      Aye, a smart builder learns from her mistakes, but a wise builder learns from the mistakes of others.

    • @G1rby
      @G1rby Před rokem +52

      this applys to literally everything ALWAYS DO RESEARCH

    • @Chris.Brisson
      @Chris.Brisson Před rokem +8

      @@G1rby we oft succumb to pleas of "Do SOMETHING even if it's wrong!"

    • @brandob4220
      @brandob4220 Před rokem +9

      FACTS I did so much research before buying parts and I still had to wait for 1 more thing since i fucked up. def do research

    • @adolfolopez3059
      @adolfolopez3059 Před rokem +1

      That’s what I’m doing lmao

  • @thegoodboi2748
    @thegoodboi2748 Před 3 lety +11895

    IF YOU LOSE A SCREW OR OTHER SMALL METAL OBJECT, DO NOT TURN ON YOU COMPUTER UNTIL YOU FIND IT. I cannot tell how easy it is to fry a board that way.

    • @tfr
      @tfr Před 3 lety +231

      Bump

    • @crazystairs7124
      @crazystairs7124 Před 3 lety +636

      Wow, that happened to me but I found the screw beforehand. Talk about dodging a bullet

    • @GreakFTW
      @GreakFTW Před 3 lety +668

      Easier finding the screw if you go for burnmarks or flashing condensators tho.

    • @Tomi-always-Tomi
      @Tomi-always-Tomi Před 3 lety +207

      @@GreakFTW but not easier for your wallet

    • @mortophobegaming6454
      @mortophobegaming6454 Před 3 lety +59

      just grab a big& strong magnet to recover it!

  • @SLO_MZ3
    @SLO_MZ3 Před 3 lety +2524

    Forgetting to turn on the PSU when you're done

  • @ralphmods
    @ralphmods Před rokem +1294

    Great video, I've made a few milestones because I had to watch more than once
    1:00 motherboard assembling suggestions (processor, m2 ssd)
    3:56 dram installation (best usage of channels)
    6:20 cpu cooler
    9:14 air flow, fans
    12:20 water cooler radiators air flow
    14:29 graphics card, sizes, dimensions
    17:18 power cables

    • @jibreelhughes
      @jibreelhughes Před rokem +9

      Ty much appreciated

    • @knockedtfout5333
      @knockedtfout5333 Před rokem +7

      4 months later but I appreciate this comment

    • @3Black.1Red
      @3Black.1Red Před rokem +3

      best comment. over a year after the fact but still best

    • @ORTHODOX-PATH
      @ORTHODOX-PATH Před 10 měsíci +1

      @@3Black.1Red Please tell me I have a motherboard Dual Channel on MSI Pro z590 and I started from inside near the cpu i mean the second slot ...and for the second Dimm I enter it to the outer slot is this correct? Thank you very much in advance.

    • @balladin9200
      @balladin9200 Před 10 měsíci +2

      @@ORTHODOX-PATH
      He’s saying if you have 4 slots and 2 ram sticks, stick it in 1 and 3 or 2 and 4

  • @juvenilemrcia2664
    @juvenilemrcia2664 Před rokem +142

    I managed to avoid all the common issues in my first build because I read all the manuals first, but I will say that the issue I DID have was caused by following the instructions TOO closely. My motherboard had two places to plug in the PSU. The manual stated that the second slot was only needed if you overclocked. We’ll I didn’t plan on overclocking, so I only plugged I. The first set of PSU cables, trying to have as few cables as possible. Once O turned it on… nothing. No post, no beeps, no fans. All I got was a debug led that said CPU. I thought for sure it was a bad CPU, so I returned the chip and bought another one. Still didn’t fox it. It took my brother telling me that sometimes you need that overclock power, even if you aren’t overclocking. I plugged in those cables, and BOOM, it’s worked perfectly ever since.

  • @alex_ofl3554
    @alex_ofl3554 Před 3 lety +4405

    Tip for new builders: "First you're gonna need a table" -Stefan Etienne

  • @kingvon4074
    @kingvon4074 Před 3 lety +1455

    pro tip: don’t forget to plug in the cable for the power button
    edit: yes, i made this mistake & spent 6 hours trying to diagnose something that wasn’t broken until i actually read the manual and realized what was missing.

    • @MattWeber
      @MattWeber Před 3 lety +40

      or per Jay's immediately previous video from this.. dont forget to plug in the power cable to an outlet.

    • @TD-er
      @TD-er Před 3 lety +30

      Gigabyte has those plastic headers in which you plug your case pins (LED/reset/pwr) and then stick that single block in the main board.
      Really nice and incredible simple system.
      Would have been nice if manufacturers had those in the '90s when I was building lots of PCs when working in a computer store.
      Those silly pins are still present in the current cases, but without such a simple plastic header you keep on messing with those tiny pin headers.

    • @Xx-ru3ng
      @Xx-ru3ng Před 3 lety +1

      Unfortunately been there, done that.

    • @KevinIrish
      @KevinIrish Před 3 lety +5

      @@TD-er I just upgraded my PC, but kept my Dell XPS 8700 case. Obviously Dell's and MSI's front panel pinout doesn't match so I bought a connector kit, depinned the Dell connector and reoriented them in the new connector to match MSI's pins. Super clean and no need to mess with those tiny, individual connectors anymore. Did the same thing with the audio connector, Dell used a bright yellow connector and I replaced it with a black one.
      Actually, now that I think about it, I had to do something similar with my AIO's USB connector. My case has USBs on top and a card reader on the front which took up both USB 2.0 headers on the mobo. Luckily the card reader and the AIO only used one row of pins each, so I was able to combine them into one connector.

    • @korneliuspgk527
      @korneliuspgk527 Před 3 lety +3

      I plugged the power button on the pins right next to the ones you're supposed to and was freaking out why it wasn't turning on

  • @bdmski
    @bdmski Před rokem +576

    Pro Tip: If upgrading your PSU do not be lazy and reuse your old wires. You will fry your motherboard and/or hard drives. Take the old power cords out and put in the new ones that came with your new PSU. Each PSU manufacturer and even models are wired differently on the PSU side.

    • @pavelsoloway3675
      @pavelsoloway3675 Před rokem +8

      And what about that beautiful custom cables which are made by third-party companies?
      They're kinda universal or what?

    • @ReddwarfIV
      @ReddwarfIV Před rokem +12

      ​@Pavel BadSlime Only use them if they're rated to handle the current.

    • @Teddy_Bear312
      @Teddy_Bear312 Před rokem +17

      @@pavelsoloway3675 Custom extension cables are 99% of the time universal since they just "extend" the existing cable and don't do anything themselves. Although the current they can handle can vary, so be cautious which brand you're buying (cheap chinese extenders may not be the smartest choice)
      Custom PSU cables on the other hand are not universal. CableMod for example has different cables for different PSU's and you have to select your PSU to ensure you get the right cables.

    • @pavelsoloway3675
      @pavelsoloway3675 Před rokem +1

      @@Teddy_Bear312 thanks for clarifying this!

    • @janfrederikwille7526
      @janfrederikwille7526 Před rokem +1

      Molex plugs have norms as far as I know, thus the pinning will not differ, if you buy or reuse cables for the same intention.

  • @Xomihni
    @Xomihni Před rokem +477

    It would be helpful to have a short video of what to expect after you finish the physical build. For example installing the new OS, downloading new drivers, and common errors that arise (setting motherboard to Windows 11 settings, etc).

    • @isoSw1fty
      @isoSw1fty Před rokem +8

      Troubleshooting is the fun part though

    • @liteknight
      @liteknight Před rokem +55

      Jayztwocents already has an older, but still very helpful video on that titled: "Guide: What to do AFTER building your computer..." Just do a quick CZcams search to find it. Cheers

    • @Xomihni
      @Xomihni Před rokem +12

      @@liteknight Yeah I saw that video the very next day after posting this comment.

    • @FormlessFlesh
      @FormlessFlesh Před 10 měsíci +13

      Just built my new PC and I was getting angry because it wasn't recognizing my GPU.
      Discovered that the power cable was not connected to the PSU 🤦🏽

    • @stateportSound_wav
      @stateportSound_wav Před 8 měsíci +5

      @@liteknightfor anyone reading this now, there’s a 2023 edition he uploaded (I’m guessing it was uploaded after you guys commented)

  • @doublelunch24
    @doublelunch24 Před 3 lety +3690

    My Tip:
    You don't have to build your whole PC in one go! Don't keep building if you're getting really tired or you will have less fun and be more prone to mistakes and frustration.

    • @reposter6434
      @reposter6434 Před 3 lety +228

      Took me 3hrs, first time building one!! Didn't get bored or tired, was more worried and careful with every part//component.

    • @tikyreol978
      @tikyreol978 Před 3 lety +97

      I do my best work under stress.

    • @Syorbic
      @Syorbic Před 3 lety +22

      good tip buuut tbh i'd scared and worried to be bored lol

    • @daniellapointe6658
      @daniellapointe6658 Před 3 lety +34

      @@reposter6434 Took me 6 the first time, 3 to put it together and 3 to "cable manage". 2nd build (just a case and cooling upgrade) took me even longer but it looks MUCH nicer, but definitely tons of times where I got frustrated, especially trying to top mount a push/pull radiator

    • @reposter6434
      @reposter6434 Před 3 lety +36

      @@daniellapointe6658 Part I struggled with the most is actually placing the motherboard in, it just didn't seem to fit and I spent at least 30mins trying to fit it into the case. Second most painful part... was trying to get picture on my monitor, nothing was showing on screen and spent a hour or two looking on the internet for hours, wasn't until I asked a friend and he told me what was up... turns out I put the DPI cable into the motherboard slot XD other than that though it all worked out well.

  • @robertmerrill9849
    @robertmerrill9849 Před 3 lety +738

    Hang onto the spare parts. They might not be spares after all.

    • @gunnar6674
      @gunnar6674 Před 3 lety +20

      And they come in very handy when you're upgrading the machine. Especially the power supply cables - not all power supply cables are interchangable.

    • @punkizm
      @punkizm Před 3 lety +14

      Yes, being a hoarder for cables and adapters has saved me heaps on my current build and on my last. Especially if you’re not working with high end stuff.

    • @robertmerrill9849
      @robertmerrill9849 Před 3 lety +4

      @@punkizm I had been collecting parts, cabales, etc. since 1983. About 8 years ago I decided it was time to get rid of that which hasn't been used in 20 years or more. Well about 90% went unnoticed, but that darn 10% came a knocking one day when I needed something for my Pentium Overdrive system I decided to take out of the closet. Live and learn.

    • @vainhazearden6788
      @vainhazearden6788 Před 3 lety

      Correct i once discover a spare SATA cable from those old PSU

    • @jfan4reva
      @jfan4reva Před 3 lety +1

      I bought one desktop computer back in the 1980s. Started upgrading it. After a while I looked around and realized that all I needed was a case, monitor, keyboard and mouse and I could have a second computer. Lather, rinse, repeat for the next 30 years. I did buy my wife a desktop computer about 5-10 years ago when she insisted (although she mostly uses her phone and ipad now,) but most of the computers my kids used were upgrades.

  • @brianritzler6840
    @brianritzler6840 Před rokem +164

    Pro Tip: Make sure you purchase a power supply that can supply enough power to your build. Purchasing a properly rated power supply is critical to a properly functioning and safe build. As mentioned in the video, power is drawn, not supplied. So, if your system, including MB, Processor, video card, and hdd/sdd needs a certain amount of power, an under rated PS isn't going to last. You will burn it up. If your Video card need 300 W, your MB and chipset needs another 200 W, you will want somewhere in the neighborhood of a 700 W PS minimum. This insures that you have enough rated power to also handle all those peripherals, like powered USB devices, your case fans, liquid cooling pumps, SSD/HDD, etc... It is Okay to get one a lot larger than what you actually need, A 1200W PS does not use 1200W, it just means that it can handle a 1200W draw from the devices in your build. If your system is using 550W of power and you are putting in a 300W PS, you are pulling 150 W more than the PS can handle. This creates a lot of excess heat, components burn up and you will eventually let the magic smoke out of your PS. The mathematical formula for Power (watts) is Voltage (V) x Current/Amps (I) = Watts (P). In the US power runs at 110-120 Volts. That 300W PS can only handle 2.5-2.72 Amps of current. Your system needs 4.5-5 Amps of current, so you are forcing an additional ~2.5 amps through a power supply that is not designed to handle it. I will work for a while, but eventually the PS will die, and sometimes spectacularly, and when it does go, you risk losing your whole computer system to current spikes. TLDR: DON'T USE A PS THAT IS RATED LOWER THAN YOUR COMPUTERS POWER NEEDS, OR YOU WILL BREAK YOUR COMPUTER.

    • @ziudra91
      @ziudra91 Před 6 měsíci +5

      Boughta 1000 W power supply. Should do it

    • @MrGame189
      @MrGame189 Před 6 měsíci +1

      I recommend 850w or 1000w depends on anyone.

    • @Tony-gu4sz
      @Tony-gu4sz Před 4 měsíci

      So I'm still acquiring the parts for a 14th gen PC build (my first build in over 10 years). I have the case (NZXT H7 flow), I have the PSU, RM1000x), I have the hydro-Cooler (NZXT Kraken), I also have a set of "Be Quiet" 140mm Case fans,
      My question is.. There are 6 fans in the set. 1x 2600 rpm, 2x 1400 rpm & 3x 900 rpm... Where should I be mounting, which fans in my case? I assume the 2600 is for the back. But I'm not certain about the others, bearing in mind the Kraken Hydro-Cooler has a further 2x Fans & the GPU (as yet not purchased will have another 2 or 3 fans). Any advice would be welcome, or even a link to an airflow diagram.
      Thanks!!

    • @sonicclang
      @sonicclang Před 3 měsíci +1

      "Powered is drawn, not supplied" is a good way for people to think about how power gets from the supply to the load, but it is actually supplied. That's why it's called a power supply.

    • @joshstreet4187
      @joshstreet4187 Před 2 měsíci

      You also risk losing your house in worst case scenarios lol.
      Dont be cheap and spend the extra $50 for higher rated psu

  • @john_c1
    @john_c1 Před rokem +112

    TIP: pay attention to where the notch is when installing memory modules. Make sure the notch aligns with the slots on the MB. If they don’t align pushing them in will damage the memory slots or modules themselves.

    • @Lighthouse_out_of_order
      @Lighthouse_out_of_order Před rokem +2

      Yea, I fried 3 memory slots and 1 memory stick by placing them backwards. I am not sure how I did it, but it did click.

  • @Turbo614
    @Turbo614 Před 3 lety +573

    IO SHEILDS: not all motherboards come with them built-in! Install this into the case first! In the correct orientation!

    • @TType851
      @TType851 Před 3 lety +35

      To add to that, make sure none of the ports are blocked by the little metal tabs around some of the ports. Have had to pull a mobo more than once because a USB port was partially blocked by a little tab from the io shield.

    • @drestnar
      @drestnar Před 3 lety +7

      had to remove the mobo after fully building to do this. good call

    • @rwbeckman
      @rwbeckman Před 3 lety +10

      For regular tower case, orientation, it is always the Audio towards the bottom of the IO plate, or audio closest to the PCI slots

    • @jt8813
      @jt8813 Před 3 lety +2

      been there done that lol

    • @abby8043
      @abby8043 Před 3 lety +4

      You mean the brace?

  • @Deleteyourself83
    @Deleteyourself83 Před 3 lety +770

    PC buildings biggest mistake:
    Expecting to be able to buy a gpu...

    • @itstoolatetoapologize4954
      @itstoolatetoapologize4954 Před 3 lety +25

      expecting the GPU to be at the SRP when it will be doubled once it becomes available in your country...

    • @FatherManus
      @FatherManus Před 3 lety +7

      Or a Ryzen 5000 series CPU for that matter.

    • @Smakheed
      @Smakheed Před 3 lety +6

      and expecting to by a high enough rated PSU

    • @innocentbystander3317
      @innocentbystander3317 Před 3 lety +1

      @@FatherManus
      Bought mine on Amazon at MSRP. Really wasnt difficult to find.. Have you tried looking with your eyes?

    • @dholocronkeeper
      @dholocronkeeper Před 3 lety +1

      But hey, you can buy anything Intel!
      I’ll see myself out.

  • @joeistead
    @joeistead Před rokem +64

    Tip: don't go crazy tightening the screws on the first pass, i.e., before you realize where everything needs to go, and in what order. You can always come back to them later.

    • @brianritzler6840
      @brianritzler6840 Před rokem +11

      In response to this tip, always tighten your screws in a cross pattern. This means you tighten one screw only a little snug, then go the screw directly opposite that screw and tighten it snug. The repeat for the other two screws. Gently move from screw to screw in the same pattern until you cannot snug it down any further. You are done tightening, the screws are at the optimum tightness and the fan or PS or whatever, is fully flush to your system.

  • @Senseimatty81
    @Senseimatty81 Před rokem +103

    Bend radius: don't stress cables just to be sure you can hide them.
    Also be sure you don't have loose wiring passing in front of the fan. Especially on top of horizontal fans.

  •  Před 3 lety +703

    Don´t drink 12 beers while building a system. 6-8 is the sweet spot !

    • @tikket10
      @tikket10 Před 3 lety +27

      Or dont drink beer at all.

    • @juaquiqui-kun4333
      @juaquiqui-kun4333 Před 3 lety +15

      @@tikket10 on god

    • @kimrkarl
      @kimrkarl Před 3 lety +29

      @@tikket10 No

    • @tzxazrael
      @tzxazrael Před 3 lety +5

      ORRRR maybe just limit yourself to 1-2 beers, and then as many as you want/can handle afterwards.

    •  Před 3 lety +4

      @@tzxazrael Haha, yes maybe 😜

  • @outlet6989
    @outlet6989 Před 3 lety +742

    Years ago, I decided to build my first computer. Since I really knew very little about doing this, I went to a bookstore. In the "how to do" section, I came across a manual entitled, "How to build a computer and not make mistakes." The author was JayzTwoCents. What a crazy name, I thought. But, I guessed that he must know more about this than me, and I bought it.

    • @mrrpgswe8931
      @mrrpgswe8931 Před 3 lety +87

      I got a book with the same title, but authored by some "Stefan Etienne" dude.
      Seems legit. 😜

    • @rogerwilco2
      @rogerwilco2 Před 3 lety +41

      I got *Upgrading and Repairing PCs by Scott Mueller,* back in 1990 or so.
      He still seems to update it, it's up to the 23rd edition or something like that.

    • @Doxsein
      @Doxsein Před 2 lety +20

      I enjoyed reading this short story.

    • @steelkinq3708
      @steelkinq3708 Před 2 lety +9

      And he goes like "do as i say, not as i do" :D

    • @barbieonweeds
      @barbieonweeds Před 2 lety +8

      @@mrrpgswe8931 you okay now?
      Or you lost your house in fire?

  • @trailboss_vader
    @trailboss_vader Před rokem +51

    My biggest tip would be to be delicate with handling your CPU cooler. Aluminum fins can be pretty sharp depending on the brand and I have had more than one slice my finger because my hand slipped or I shifted while gripping it. Could just be a me thing but wanted to throw it out there anyways.

    • @sarcasm-83
      @sarcasm-83 Před rokem +23

      Sounds like you handle cutting edge technology.
      * ba-dum - tshh *

    • @ReginaDeiFinocchi
      @ReginaDeiFinocchi Před 10 měsíci +3

      i'll keep this in mind as i handle my new watercooler with my mutliated and burnt chef hands

    • @lolboy-642
      @lolboy-642 Před 3 měsíci

      does the extra blood help cool things more? 🤔

  • @g-wolf9445
    @g-wolf9445 Před rokem +16

    Prep your area, prep your area and, yes, prep your area. Things people don't think about, whether it's building in stages, or where they are going to work on their build, is do I have an ESD mat, ESD wrist strap or other items that can help me protect my PC components. It does not take much for static discharge to ruin a CPU, BIOS chip or some other controller on your motherboard or GPU. Also, have a way to organize screws and some people don't think about this but take pictures during your build so if you run into problems you have something to reference. Excellent video for beginners!!

    • @DGneoseeker1
      @DGneoseeker1 Před měsícem

      Would simply touching a radiator and/or putting on a pair of rubber gloves be sufficient? In the past I got away with grounding myself on a radiator immediately before touching anything in the case during building.

    • @g-wolf9445
      @g-wolf9445 Před měsícem

      @DGneoseeker1 Rubber gloves are not meant to be a way for preventing static discharge. Depending on the material the gloves could increase the chance of ESD. The best option, on a budget, is to have an ESD wrist strap that is attached to the bare metal chassis or some other metal grounding point.

    • @DGneoseeker1
      @DGneoseeker1 Před měsícem

      @@g-wolf9445 The part I don't quite understand about this is that the metal chassis in itself is going to be sitting on a non-conductive table so where is the charge grounding to?

    • @g-wolf9445
      @g-wolf9445 Před měsícem

      @DGneoseeker1 If you are serious about having a true ESD safe configuration buy ESD matting for the work surface, buy and install an ESD continuous monitoring station to plug your ESD wrist strap into and also have a humidity monitor for the room you are working in. That's a true ESD safe setup. If you have a way to tie the PC chassis into an earth ground and then tie your ESD wrist strap into the chassis that will work too.

  • @superhero6785
    @superhero6785 Před 2 lety +2097

    Tip: Just do it. Don't be scared. There are plenty of resources online if you get stuck or something isn't working. After you complete your first build, you'll never want to go back to store bought.

    • @danestrenton
      @danestrenton Před 2 lety +84

      Basically what I did. Always wanted a good pc but didn't want a pre-built. Budgeted, bought the parts, watched a few videos on here and did it. Building the pc itself is the easy part, it's actually getting it to run stable once you get the OS installed that's a fucking pain in the ass. Spent two weeks after building it troubleshooting driver problems before figuring out that the auto overclock programs it came with was causing it to BSOD along with the 5700XT that I bought. After replacing the Wraith Prism cooler with a Noctua DH15 same thing, constant BSODs. Had to reseat CPU, RAM, and the GPU along with reapplying thermal paste and resetting the OS. Haven't had an issue since, and that was after panic buying new RAM for it. Only advice I have is get familiar with Event Viewer and Command Prompt

    • @vivvy_0
      @vivvy_0 Před 2 lety +13

      @@danestrenton what does bsod mean?

    • @danestrenton
      @danestrenton Před 2 lety +49

      @@vivvy_0 It means Blue Screen of Death. It's what shows whenever your computer crashes, or at least should show. It's also the most contrarian thing I've ever seen, equal parts valuable and absolutely useless.

    • @DonMachado
      @DonMachado Před 2 lety +117

      You need to watch yourself though. You start out saying to yourself, "I'll just try it this one time." Then your friend is tempting you to try it again with him, and your think, "What could it hurt?" Before you know it, you're hooked and you start dealing PCs on EBay, just to support your habit, all the while thinking, "I can quit anytime I want to." But you can't, you start staying home instead of going out, you lose your girlfriend, you become a hermit churning out gamers over and over until finally you become a CZcamsr. I've seen it before.

    • @scotteric8711
      @scotteric8711 Před 2 lety +6

      A year ago, I rebuilt my Msi laptop into a beast for what it is. Now I'm confident in building my first desktop. I'm well inclined technically, but never before with computers. I learned everything I've done online in forums and YT.

  • @FreshPrints702
    @FreshPrints702 Před 10 měsíci +3

    Thank you!!! I've been working on my first build over the last few months after waiting for parts, and your videos have helped me through the whole process. I'm super grateful! I was stressed working with a 4090 and a 7950X for my first build, and your videos helped me not make any detrimental mistakes. I appreciate what you do!

  • @ienupar2003
    @ienupar2003 Před 7 měsíci +6

    I'vee been following you for a while, but after watching this video - I have to say it: Congrats for all the great material! Very clear, concise, no-BS information, crystal clear. You sir, are a blessing to the PC master race building community!

  • @andrewharwood7843
    @andrewharwood7843 Před 3 lety +159

    Those motherboard NVMe heatsinks will usually have a peel on the thermal pad as well. Don't cook your expensive SSD

    • @Yemto
      @Yemto Před 3 lety +5

      I did this at the start of the month. Thankfully I was going to show a friend where the SSD was located, so I removed the shield and put it aside, it was then I notice the peel.

    • @Mjdecker1234
      @Mjdecker1234 Před 3 lety

      Wait really. The group I was in told me to leave it off (because it wouldn't fit no matter what). 3-4 months i think now and no issues but that doesn't mean anything.

    • @timhartherz5652
      @timhartherz5652 Před 3 lety +2

      You also might need to remove or relocate one or more m.2 standoffs, or else they will be pressing into the back of the SSD, making it bend, break or short circuit.

    • @jmlinden7
      @jmlinden7 Před 3 lety +1

      @@timhartherz5652 Yup I had to do this on a MSI Z490 Tomahawk, kinda stupid how they install 2 standoffs on a single m.2 slot

    • @timhartherz5652
      @timhartherz5652 Před 3 lety +1

      @@jmlinden7 Same on the b550 Tomahawk, probably for really short SSD's i would assume.

  • @Dank_Lulu
    @Dank_Lulu Před 3 lety +689

    Not a seasoned PC builder and you've mentioned this a few times before, Jay, but... turning on the RAM XMP thingy in the BIOS is pretty easy to overlook...

    • @rookie4582
      @rookie4582 Před 3 lety +6

      I lost to a Lulu last match 🤫

    • @Bot.number.69420
      @Bot.number.69420 Před 3 lety +6

      I had bios that randomly resetted xmp on my X570 gigabyte. Latest bios update fixed that.

    • @FaithWandering
      @FaithWandering Před 3 lety +1

      And if doing that causes boot loop or crashes, try checking for bios updates

    • @tonygeddes9558
      @tonygeddes9558 Před 3 lety +1

      Yeah, I forgot to do that.

    • @Mediamatix
      @Mediamatix Před 3 lety +1

      I build mine today and I totally forgot. :(

  • @ZA8103
    @ZA8103 Před rokem +23

    My tip:
    0. Check the manual first always before you start/buy any parts.
    1. Similar to the previous, check if the RAM you are gonna buy is tested by the MB company.
    The MB company will put the part number they have tested on its web.
    2. Don't forget to consider the static. So using an anti-static mat can help.
    3. Keep the CPU socket protector, and put it back when you don't have a CPU on it.
    4. When installing AIO, make sure the fan side pipe is hight than the CPU side pipe because it may contain some air inside the pipe.
    5. Imaging how heat flow in your PC can help you to avoid some silly mistakes.

  • @genereynolds5667
    @genereynolds5667 Před měsícem +3

    Thank you for this refresher. I've build rigs in the past but recently a friend of mine has asked me to build one for him. This video was very helpful to bring me up to speed with the issues around larger RAM chips, CPU heat sinks, graphics cards and the power requirements, etc... Thank you!

  • @Lunerages
    @Lunerages Před 3 lety +483

    Common mistake for beginners : assuming all those shiny RGB products will EVER work well together :P

    • @PANCHO15108
      @PANCHO15108 Před 3 lety +26

      I got an all corsair rgb build with mouse pad, mouse, headset holder, keyboard, ram, 6 fans, aio cooler, an asus mother board and lian li 24 pin/ 8 pin rgb cables. All of them are synced with corsair. 😸😸😸😸

    • @zofferz0
      @zofferz0 Před 3 lety +24

      @@PANCHO15108 hes referring to different brands that wont sync with specific applications like aura sync, icue, etc

    • @pryn.darkstorm
      @pryn.darkstorm Před 3 lety +5

      @@zofferz0 never mind *different* brands, I bought a used H700i, realized I need a 2nd exhaust fan, bought an Aer RGB 2, only to find the RGB on that is incompatible with the controller in the case

    • @Xevailo
      @Xevailo Před 3 lety

      Oooh yes! The build I had before my current one was from 2013, so the only thing RGB wise was a nzxt hue controller (the OG that fit into the 5.2" bay). So when I build my current setup last October, I was pretty excited about the prospect of having all the rgb things be controllable in the system and even moreso bind them to specific system parameters. At least that was my plan. So you can probably understand my disappointment when I opened RGB Fusion for the first time...

    • @nznakzez
      @nznakzez Před 3 lety +2

      or assuming that your gskill ram will be synced with the other sticks lmaoooo

  • @notUrAvrgGamer
    @notUrAvrgGamer Před 3 lety +406

    just remember everyone: every tip is "important"

  • @richardwhitehead6966
    @richardwhitehead6966 Před rokem +59

    Did my first complete build over the weekend. Have swapped parts out before, but never a total build. A lot of extremely useful advice in the video and comments. Thanks everyone.

  • @1988theRick
    @1988theRick Před rokem +1

    Air flow from the fans was the biggest thing i was wondering about. thank you for explaining it so clearly, ill never forget it now!

  • @WeirdViking
    @WeirdViking Před 2 lety +573

    One random tip for total first timers is to actually practice with your old system if its next destination is trash can anyways. You can pull things off, practice putting them back in, see how everything works, what goes where, how much pressure you need to apply and where you might break or mess something up. It doesn't matter in an old PC that was going to the trash anyways and you'll feel more comfortable handling your new shiny PC parts.

    • @enfieldjohn101
      @enfieldjohn101 Před 2 lety +11

      This is brilliant! Makes total sense too. In almost anything we learn to do, practice really helps. It's an excellent idea to practice building on a computer that you are planning to donate or trash. Would really be a great idea for trying to seat a processor for the first time as that can be one of the hardest things to do given how delicate they are.
      I took classes at a community college on computer hardware, networking, etc. when I was getting ready to apply for IT jobs at computer stores. They had many systems of all sorts of configurations in the lab for us to practice on. The only thing that gets you over the shakes of 'omg I don't wanna break it' is to practice actually doing it.

    • @nilTheyogi
      @nilTheyogi Před 2 lety +8

      this is how i learned to build them as a kid. for some reason there was no end to ancient pcs available to me, and i took them apart and figured out how to make all kinds of frankenstein machines

    • @pilgrim4768
      @pilgrim4768 Před 2 lety +2

      Best advice. Even more, find your nearest etech recycling place and or family and friends with old computers lying around grab all kind sof bits and pieces.... and build, build build, problem solve and get stuff working...
      Then build your expensive gaming pc ;)

    • @rozsasbarnabas9748
      @rozsasbarnabas9748 Před 2 lety +1

      I've done this with a 3900x and a Be! Quiet dark rock pro 4. It was just my own construction.

    • @killerrf
      @killerrf Před 2 lety +1

      My old computer pentium mmx 200 mhz overclocked to 250 mhz with 83 mhz max bus speed which wasn’t in the asus manual. (Had to completely remove jumper to get that speed ) found the magic of thermal paste. Only way to get 50 mhz more out of it haha good old days. Learned a lot with my first computer.

  • @johnjackson2349
    @johnjackson2349 Před 3 lety +1708

    That tip at the end for increased frame rates is amazing! I went from displaying 59hz to 60hz in an instant 😎

    • @MrDeanguy
      @MrDeanguy Před 2 lety +182

      I made your comment go from 59 likes to 60 likes👍

    • @chaycooper5923
      @chaycooper5923 Před 2 lety +56

      I went from 59.997 to 60.000 take that

    • @gfox9295
      @gfox9295 Před 2 lety +21

      haha... my display properties only has 50, 59, and 60 as options, but 60 was already selected. I have a 9 year old monitor and a 6 year old monitor.
      Upgrading my PC soon(TM) and I'm eyeing a 34 inch curved widescreen with 100hz, ooo baby.

    • @johnjackson2349
      @johnjackson2349 Před 2 lety +15

      @@gfox9295 my monitor is 12y old and was a good one back in the day 1080p display. No idea why 59hz to 60hz was an option haha 😆

    • @gfox9295
      @gfox9295 Před 2 lety +2

      @@johnjackson2349 Yeah. I'm sure there's a story behind it someone techier than you or I might know. ;)

  • @Shrek765
    @Shrek765 Před rokem +1

    Thank You Jay. It's been 12 years from my last Build and Building in 2023! Nice to have the refresh in all from the Build to the install!!! Doing it out of the case to make sure everything works before it goes into the Case.

  • @SpaceshipOperations
    @SpaceshipOperations Před 7 měsíci +1

    Excellent video. All the tips about cooling and convection are really helpful and well-explained. 👍

  • @headkicked
    @headkicked Před 3 lety +517

    "People keep making mistakes so we will keep making the videos!"
    The beatings will continue until moral improves!

    • @kasper_429
      @kasper_429 Před 3 lety +13

      morale* , but I get that reference. Lol.

    • @cashnelson2306
      @cashnelson2306 Před 3 lety +1

      Kant as a drill instructor

    • @TreeOfLifeCG
      @TreeOfLifeCG Před 3 lety +1

      Gunny had that flag on his desk lol.

    • @Smakheed
      @Smakheed Před 3 lety +2

      @@kasper_429 it works with morals too....

    • @kasper_429
      @kasper_429 Před 3 lety +1

      @@Smakheed lol true, but the original line (how I've heard it, at least) is morale.

  • @BrandonSale
    @BrandonSale Před 3 lety +221

    Pro tip: route your cpu cable through the top hole before you install the motherboard

    • @frickzjee
      @frickzjee Před 3 lety +3

      depens on the quallity of the case, yeah i have to do that most of the time because customers cheap out on a case

    • @RashoLive
      @RashoLive Před 3 lety +1

      I had to remove a mobo once because of this! :D

    • @newroo
      @newroo Před 3 lety +1

      Well you can add CPU Power cable(s) might be plural dependent on cpu and motherboard.

    • @treborrrrr
      @treborrrrr Před 3 lety +2

      @@frickzjee Cheaping out on the case seems like a good option to me. Personally I don't give a crap about what the system looks like since I suspend it under my desk so I don't have to see it at all. And I usually only build in it once, I rarely add anything to a system once it is built. So for me it makes perfect sense to not spend a lot of money on a case to fix a five minute inconvenience.
      Just giving a different viewpoint :)

    • @munem939
      @munem939 Před 3 lety

      @@treborrrrr Omfg you're giving a different viewpoint on the internet?? HOW DARE YOU??? 😤😤😤 Jk obviously lol

  • @strange2123
    @strange2123 Před rokem +5

    I've built a couple gaming pc's now and still find this video helpful as a reminder before starting or during. In fact yesterday i made the mistake of the radiator being to large for my case and my massive gpu. I was less than a half inch from it fitting inside the case. Could not fit the radiator on the top either due to ram clearance. my plan is to get a smaller radiator and see what happens. Fingers crossed!

  • @tonicktv951
    @tonicktv951 Před rokem +5

    I would briefly cover XMP/DOCP along with your dual-channel SDRAM bit (and how to check the operating frequency). Many people probably have their SDRAM kits installed improperly and therefore aren't getting the speeds they expect.

  • @Commanderchow
    @Commanderchow Před 3 lety +123

    Been running in single channel mode for 3 years... FML... ty lmao

    • @brykit1972
      @brykit1972 Před 3 lety +12

      I built and upgraded many PCs without knowing dual channel was a thing. Over a 20 year span!

    • @patricktho6546
      @patricktho6546 Před 3 lety +5

      Always look into the manual of your motherboard.
      On my old mobo it was right next to eachother for dual channel (even same color slots, since they were 2 different colors for them) and now the more common arrangemebt like Jay said.

    • @Stanbacchus
      @Stanbacchus Před 3 lety +1

      Well, a free upgrade! 😃

    • @KanedaSyndrome
      @KanedaSyndrome Před 3 lety +2

      @@brykit1972 wow..

    • @brykit1972
      @brykit1972 Před 3 lety +3

      @@KanedaSyndrome Yup. I thought I was saving money on single sticks and "leaving a free slot to upgrade". To my credit, I actually did use the free slots sometimes!

  • @dawasaoki6524
    @dawasaoki6524 Před 3 lety +697

    Don't forget the tweezers and the thermal paste applicator, those are the most important

    • @skarf1428
      @skarf1428 Před 3 lety +72

      I wonder if we’ll ever get tired of making fun of that video.

    • @ukairoenyinnaya6679
      @ukairoenyinnaya6679 Před 3 lety +59

      The fact that we still talk about this till now just goes to show how much of a dumpster fire it was.

    • @timkoken1570
      @timkoken1570 Před 3 lety +49

      And the anti static, no, anti cancer wristband

    • @TanguyBlanchard
      @TanguyBlanchard Před 3 lety +9

      @@timkoken1570 they're collectible right?

    • @seireiart
      @seireiart Před 3 lety +12

      Also, the CPU applicator, don't ever forget that.

  • @275dpr
    @275dpr Před měsícem

    This is one of the best videos I've ever seen. Knowing why things are installed a specific way, such as the fans, And how airflow works etc is amazing.

  • @kevinintheusa8984
    @kevinintheusa8984 Před rokem +24

    Great tips. I built my first computer in 1992 and never looked back. I have built over 200 systems by this point and I learned a few things watching this video. Great job. I think it was much easier early on to build them in the case but I almost never build them in the case if I can avoid it now. My only recommendation is to put in a modular PSU that is overpowered so if you modify it later on you have enough power to support new components. Learned this when I upgraded my son's gaming rig and added a new GPU and some larger fans. He noticed that the GPU was not performing to the specs and I finally pulled the bottom cover to find that his PSU was about 200 watts short of the minimum needed to power everything we added that was new. In retrospect, I could have added a more powerful PSU on the original build and saved some steps. Great video.

  • @dollarcreations2818
    @dollarcreations2818 Před rokem +1496

    9:47 Here's a tip. For case fans of all sizes, the cages usually appear in an "X" form. "X" for exhaust. Easy to remember 🙂

    • @steadfastscout4606
      @steadfastscout4606 Před rokem +16

      Nice tip, my light wings are marked lol

    • @I_will_like_to_keep_my_dad
      @I_will_like_to_keep_my_dad Před rokem +3

      I have to cut my fans bc my case is small they are held by one small screw...

    • @Elkarlo77
      @Elkarlo77 Před rokem +6

      @@I_will_like_to_keep_my_dad Are you using Slim Fans ? Normal Fan height is 25mm, and there are Slim Fans with 12-15mm. When the Intake of the Fan is Crowded a Slim Fan will improve Performance. The extra 10mm allows the Blades of the Fan to scoop air better. Had a Thermaltake Case which needed Slim Fans for the top, normal fans simply didn't performed. Switched to slims and suddenly performance.

    • @I_will_like_to_keep_my_dad
      @I_will_like_to_keep_my_dad Před rokem +2

      @@Elkarlo77 yeah it was just I had a 10in case and it had no room inside, I bought a new case a few weeks ago and it's much bigger. I can fix exactly what I need now. TNX for trying to help though!

    • @ShawnHCorey
      @ShawnHCorey Před rokem +2

      Computer fans spin toward the sharpest point. Think of them as arrows pointing the direction of fan spin.
      Fan blades are curved. If it looks like an upside-down spoon, the air is blown away from you. If the spoon is upside right, it blow toward you.

  • @Tym3k97
    @Tym3k97 Před 3 lety +149

    Jay: "The older the GPU the less power it requires."
    Me, looking at my 290W 290X: "Yeah, about that..."

    • @1991mrlemon
      @1991mrlemon Před 3 lety +2

      and I thought 80c is normal for GPUs

    • @sparcolonsdale
      @sparcolonsdale Před 3 lety +3

      True also my old Radeon 5850 consumed more power based from what specs it had.

    • @MaartenKok
      @MaartenKok Před 3 lety +4

      Yeah, I'm not really sure what Jay was about there. Power usage by components has waxed and waned in the past. Usually, when a manufacturer (AMD, Intel or nvdia) has issues with a getting on a new architecture, they simply decide to build the old ones bigger and run them at higher voltages and clock speeds. That's what leads to high power usage. Switching to a smaller production process almost always leads to way better power consumption.

    • @yomom6567
      @yomom6567 Před 3 lety

      Floor is floor

    • @jacobabeyta3970
      @jacobabeyta3970 Před 3 lety

      lol same. I had 2 but with crossfire dead for gaming the other is just collecting dust in the box now cdna.pcpartpicker.com/static/forever/images/userbuild/146234.611cd89684759555787658bb45e4d09c.1600.jpg

  • @Black2KGSR
    @Black2KGSR Před rokem +5

    Very informative video. Well done.

  • @chocolate2080
    @chocolate2080 Před 4 měsíci

    Thank you Jay for sharing all the stuff and the things. 😊 ❤ We're here for you and the team.
    Sending good vibes ✨️

  • @charlie_c1373
    @charlie_c1373 Před 2 lety +513

    Old upload I know, but now that I have 5 builds under my belt I actually have something to contribute: Break your build in to stages, and take 5 - 10 min breaks between stages. It relieves some of the newb-jitters, and allows for a fresh state of mind at the beginning of each stage which will help you avoid stupid mistakes.

    • @ObakuZenCenter
      @ObakuZenCenter Před 2 lety +6

      Great tip. Thank you.

    • @brandonfulater7039
      @brandonfulater7039 Před rokem +2

      Just a question, but what were those stages for you

    • @johnpaul5656
      @johnpaul5656 Před rokem

      good tip.will save me sime mistakes for sure

    • @bararobberbaron859
      @bararobberbaron859 Před rokem +64

      @@brandonfulater7039 Can't speak for Charlie but the stages I use are:
      1. Get it all unpacked and organized
      2. populate the motherboard (CPU, RAM, M.2)
      3. (optional, only for modular PSU) check which cables you will need and put the rest aside to avoid confusion
      4. install the motherboard + CPU cooler
      5. Install the GPU and PSU and connect all the cables between components and the PSU
      6. Check your manuals to double check you did all the steps correct and check it's all connected (The power button and such can use very tiny cables and may get loose if you were a bit clumsy within the case)
      7. Close it and try to boot it and if it does in fact boot, check all the bios settings are as you wish, restart and see if it still boots.
      and finally
      8. if it does in fact boot, great, shut it down, take out the power cable and turn the PSU off, open up the case and cable manage to the best of your ability, this helps airflow, the aesthetics and you really shouldn't do this before you know the pc works. Few things suck more than having to undo a bunch of painstaking cable management because something is wrong.
      None of these stages should take more than 10 minutes, with 5 minutes breaks in between each phase takes a max of 15 minutes for a total build time of 2 hours, at most. When you get more experienced you can blend phases together (1-3 as 'outside of the case', 4-6 as 'inside the case' and 7+8 as 'finishing up') and do them in 15 minutes with 5 minute breaks that is still only a 1 hour build. Of course if you get even more experienced you can fairly safely do 1-7 in 20 minutes and spend probably no more than 10 minutes on step 8.
      But it all depends on what you're comfortable with, if you only do it once every few years some parts you remember and can speed through, others you've forgotten. There is no set time in which you should get it done. I personally don't build a lot of them, but enough that I'm most comfortable with the middle level 1 hour method. Hope this helped either you or anybody else that my come across this comment.

    • @brandonfulater7039
      @brandonfulater7039 Před rokem +2

      @@bararobberbaron859 you’re a lifesaver thank you so much

  • @GCX-bn9bi
    @GCX-bn9bi Před 3 lety +268

    Beginner tip you missed out: Switch on the goddamn power supply switch before trying to boot or you'll end up having a heart attack when it won't boot xd

    • @OlettaLiano
      @OlettaLiano Před 3 lety +17

      Right, and make sure it's plugged into the wall socket.

    • @crissto8591
      @crissto8591 Před 3 lety +13

      i always make sure it's off when i build one with a friend. Works every time hehe

    • @OlettaLiano
      @OlettaLiano Před 3 lety +15

      @@crissto8591 I had a panicked friend call me to tell me the new computer he build was dead and he needed help. I went over, looked at it, plugged it into the wall socket and it worked fine. 😂

    • @crissto8591
      @crissto8591 Před 3 lety +1

      @@OlettaLiano hehe, happened to me too. It's part of the first builder experience i like to bring to all

    • @shaneeslick
      @shaneeslick Před 3 lety +2

      @@OlettaLiano like Jays last video testing the GPU 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

  • @corneliussmiff2773
    @corneliussmiff2773 Před 2 měsíci

    This is exceptional stuff and finally a good video on the subject. I have been building PCs for 25 years, and I wish I was this concise and eloquentin explaining the pitfalls. Good job!

  • @saturo123
    @saturo123 Před rokem +1

    I Just built my 3rd system with a 3080 and didn’t really think about the whole 2 vs 3 cables thing with the pci e connectors. Definitely going back in to add that 3rd cable today 😮, good to know for the future as these cards get increasingly hungry

  • @medogunes3240
    @medogunes3240 Před 2 lety +1496

    Pro tip: On modular PSUs never ever use spare power cables from different brands of PSU, these are not standardised and each manufacturer uses different specs for the cables, the connectors may be identical but the cables aren't.

    • @CRiley-zx1ws
      @CRiley-zx1ws Před 2 lety +2

      That's literally the first thing in the video...

    • @AnarexicSumo
      @AnarexicSumo Před 2 lety +107

      @@CRiley-zx1ws The first tip in the video is to build everything you can on the motherboard. They don't even get into PSUs until about 17 minutes in and then he says to not use the same cable for multiple plugs

    • @WaWeCris
      @WaWeCris Před 2 lety +1

      i just bought a used rog psu and it only comes with one pcie cable. any recommendations? currently using 3060 ti

    • @Phernoix
      @Phernoix Před 2 lety +4

      @@WaWeCris You could try messaging their support and asking for replacement wires of the same model of PSU. Be prepared to pay though

    • @liepsan
      @liepsan Před 2 lety +17

      A few years back I literally fried my system by doing this. Lost my HDD, Motherboard, Feed and GPU. It was very costly, so please heed the warning. :)

  • @Kize_Gaming
    @Kize_Gaming Před 3 lety +64

    Make sure your case has the correct standoff (locations) installed for the motherboard you are using.

    • @miquelfire
      @miquelfire Před 3 lety

      I have a motherboard that only uses 6 of the ATX standoffs, and as a result, the case it's in has three exposed standoffs (I had transfer cases at some point, so I didn't think about this at the time, won't surprise me if the old case was the same way).

    • @grivoc
      @grivoc Před 3 lety

      6:15 I literally had a no post scenario that had me pulling my hair out last night. Every time I set the memory for DOCP it would crash on reboot and send me back to the BIOS. Apparently putting your RAM in A1 B1 and enabling DOCP = crashes. Also you video was a few hours too late as I fixed it this morning by RTFM and putting them in A2 B2

  • @philipchouliaras5879
    @philipchouliaras5879 Před 10 měsíci

    Never had an issue with any of these. Still watched the whole thing. Really well made video and great tips for bigginers or newbies on PC building.

  • @kger4643
    @kger4643 Před rokem +9

    For fans, would push fans, down low and pull up high (since heat rises) work? Maybe with a horizontal separator in between the fans so the air hits everything? Lmk. I have 8 fans, + 1 stock fan in the rear.
    I was thinking 5 pushing down low 3 pulling at the top, maybe the roof of the case and not the side panel

    • @liteknight
      @liteknight Před rokem +2

      Jayztwocents has an old video on the channel titled "Case Flow and Pressure Demonstration - How to balance airflow". I believe that video has the answers you're looking for.

    • @snoop_official
      @snoop_official Před rokem +2

      Yo, what's good my G? Yeah, that setup with the fans pushin' down low and pullin' up high should work for ya. Just make sure you got a horizontal separator in between 'em so the air hits everything. And don't forget that stock fan in the rear too, that's important for keepin' that case cool. Keep it chill, my G.

  • @gsonz172
    @gsonz172 Před 3 lety +239

    Some people also forget to mount the standoffs in the case before installing the mainboard (if they aren't pre-installed). That often causes a short circuit on the backside of the motherboard and can basically destroy it.

    • @treefiddy8811
      @treefiddy8811 Před 3 lety +23

      You're referring to standoffs correct?

    • @mvhdsk1122
      @mvhdsk1122 Před 3 lety +8

      even if there are spacers pre-installed, one should double check they are fitting the size factor of the MB that you are about to throw in.

    • @gmdzbanwic
      @gmdzbanwic Před 3 lety +3

      @@mvhdsk1122 thats how i killed my msi x79 xD rip

    • @gmdzbanwic
      @gmdzbanwic Před 3 lety +1

      no wait thats how i killed asrock am3+ msi x79 was because there was loose screw in the cage and i said meh ill get it later xD =

    • @alienautopsy6451
      @alienautopsy6451 Před 3 lety +4

      @@mvhdsk1122 yep was looking for this comment. First build long long time ago installed all the standoffs that came with mobo and ended up shorting my mobo because it didn’t line up with all the same standoffs.

  • @BWGPEI
    @BWGPEI Před 3 lety +146

    As a really old builder, who never did get into the huge graphics cards, I find you quite instructive. Live long and prosper!

    • @bigdog3628
      @bigdog3628 Před 3 lety +4

      yeah probably one of the very few people that can teach me a thing or two about this stuff.

    • @general.grevious
      @general.grevious Před 3 lety +2

      czcams.com/video/FSSFgWlDbJU/video.html

    • @justrosy5
      @justrosy5 Před 3 lety +1

      🖖🖖🖖🖖🖖

  • @cya329
    @cya329 Před rokem

    Been running my dual 1080s like Jay has been saying not to for many years. I never knew that was not how they were designed. I will be rebuilding my system soon and I will definitely be upgrading their power cable situation when I do.

  • @dustanburrell1571
    @dustanburrell1571 Před rokem +1

    THANK YOU!!!!!!!!!! I subscribed as soon as you said about not using the split cables. A buddy of mine says its no different blah blah blah nice to see someone else agrees with me lol. I've always told him if it was that simple as running the splitter why wouldn't the split not be done internally? Why would they put on 2 ports if all the power can come from one power source

  • @filnn
    @filnn Před 3 lety +74

    So my tip isn't post-purchase, but It's pre-purchase. I have a few friends who are software developers, and for some reason they believe that because they're in that field they have an understanding of hardware. However, in the real world that isn't how it generally works ie. a mechanic isn't necessarily a racing car driver, and a race car driver isn't necessarily a mechanic. Perhaps it's due to ego, but when they recently built their new PC's, they decided to go for pre-built systems (from a retailer that aren't the best at what they do). Several months down the line, they're complaining about their hardware and the price they paid. This is all due to the fact that I recently upgraded my PC and did so for a much cheaper amount which bared much better hardware. If they asked for my assistance, I would've gladly helped, yet they didn't. So my tip is: Don't be afraid to ask for help when building your first PC. Throw your ego to the side. The best way to learn is from others.

    • @tucket2000
      @tucket2000 Před 3 lety +6

      While this holds true most of the time, it seems buying a pre-built right now is the way to go.

    • @eric.is.online
      @eric.is.online Před 3 lety +2

      You can learn from other peoples mistakes and your own, that's why it's best to ask experienced and competent people.

    • @goldshadowstorm
      @goldshadowstorm Před 3 lety +3

      Yeah some parts can be impossible to get rn, and retailers are saving the ones they get for their pre built systems. So sometimes this advice is bad. I had to downgrade my new build to a 5900x and rtx3070 as stores weren't selling the 5950x and rtx3080 separately, and I wasn't about to throw $ at scalpers. I could have bought a pre built with those components though, although it would have cost more. So it really depends on availability, the rigs purpose, and budget, etc.

    • @grivoc
      @grivoc Před 3 lety +1

      I bought a system at Costco to play cyberpunk. It was an i7 9th gen + RTX2060. My actual system 5600x + RTX3080 was cheaper.

    • @chrisdpratt
      @chrisdpratt Před 3 lety +1

      There's nothing wrong with prebuilts, as long as they're from reputable companies that know what they're doing: MainGear, iBuyPower, etc. Don't buy a Dell.

  • @BenBevan66
    @BenBevan66 Před 3 lety +61

    Built my first PC yesterday, I had been planning it for two years. It took me five hours to build it but I'm happy with how it turned out, I only broke one small cable too! I had watched so much tech content on here that I was able to complete it without any of these mistakes. Thank you to you guys and all the other tech channels for sharing great advice and making me excited about technology!

    • @jm9371
      @jm9371 Před 3 lety +6

      Congrats on a very rewarding experience! I hope you managed to scrape up all the components without paying scalpers prices..

    • @PERPGamer
      @PERPGamer Před 3 lety +8

      I built my own PC too this year, actually live-streamed it. Took me 5 hours too lol :)

    • @BenBevan66
      @BenBevan66 Před 3 lety +4

      @@jm9371 Yeah, somehow managed to get a 5600x for retail price and other components were regular price too. Just waiting on MSI Ventus 3080 which I pre-ordered at normal price so I'm currently using an old GPU from a prebuild. Budget was £1500 and I went couple pounds over. Super happy with it!

    • @pvg00
      @pvg00 Před 3 lety

      Congrats! Just finished my build also... 5600x was retail, Asus 3070 was $50 over retail but I didn’t have any choice if I wanted to play. Very happy with the results

    • @jonmayer
      @jonmayer Před 3 lety

      Welcome to this addictive activity. I hope you had fun. I love building a new PC.

  • @JChhana
    @JChhana Před 7 měsíci

    This video is amazing. Very concise. Thank you so much.

  • @norbertkiss2111
    @norbertkiss2111 Před rokem

    Awesome video! Doing stuff on the motherboard before installing it inside the case hit me very hard in the face!! The airflow was also a really great one, I also learned it the hard way! :D As a beginner what I would be also interested in is some cable management best practices, as I was struggling a lot with that when I started building PCs so maybe that can be also interesting. This is the 2nd video I'm watching from you and you got a new subscriber! ^^

  • @baggedmilkdesu1887
    @baggedmilkdesu1887 Před 3 lety +249

    pro tip: Rule of thumb, screw your air/liquid coolers in using a "x" pattern. This seems to always work for me ensuring equal distribution of pressure. not all coolers have a multiple screw points so tighten till snug do not over tighten some coolers have a hard stop to prevent this but just keep it in mind

    • @andreasferenczi7613
      @andreasferenczi7613 Před 3 lety +13

      Generally, if you have four screws in a rectangle to screw in, always do it with a x-pattern. It distributes stress most evenly and thus makes it easier to align the holes for the screws.

    • @Ravio_Lee
      @Ravio_Lee Před 3 lety +5

      @@andreasferenczi7613 I was about to say it, you should always do this with 4 screws

    • @schwig44
      @schwig44 Před 3 lety +10

      @@Ravio_Lee You should do this with any bolt pattern unless specified otherwise. Like the 5 or 6 lug nuts on your car's wheels.
      It is also important to remember to not fully tighten on the first go of each fastener, get them snug, then go back and tighten completely following the same pattern.

    • @thebreatho
      @thebreatho Před 3 lety +2

      That, and don't bottom down the screws until all 4 screws are threaded in a bit. Then start tightening in a cross pattern.

    • @Ravio_Lee
      @Ravio_Lee Před 3 lety +1

      @@schwig44 yea i learned that the hard way I broke a stud on a brand new car lol the nut was still loose when I tightened it and air guns are not forgiving on max speed, won't make that mistake again

  • @ronanv1
    @ronanv1 Před 3 lety +122

    Remember, no matter what, to alway, ALWAYS, screw with confidence.

    • @jerryh1895
      @jerryh1895 Před 3 lety +2

      I like your style.

    • @luked8695
      @luked8695 Před 3 lety +4

      That's what she said

    • @hammer9856
      @hammer9856 Před 3 lety +1

      And always use a big screw driver...

    • @inzombiac345
      @inzombiac345 Před 3 lety

      unless you screw to hard and break somthing

    • @Journetta
      @Journetta Před 3 lety +3

      But don't overtighten.. and especially with cpu coolers.. screw in a diagonal pattern
      Spring loaded screws are a god send for helping you not over tighten.
      You shouldn't need to struggle.. screw until you need to put extra pressure to turn and then leave it.

  • @PeterFraser-hp3rs
    @PeterFraser-hp3rs Před rokem +112

    17:18 I didn't know this was an issue until I watched this, and of course for my two PC builds I had gone and done the one-cable jump-over thing to the second connector of my GPUs (RTX3070Ti). But I couldn't rest knowing that the power config for each GPU wasn't optimal, so last night, in the wee small hours -- and entirely on the strength of this video nagging me at the back of my mind -- I had to add the other cable to each of my PC builds. So thanks to JayzTwoCents I'll now be able to sleep at night🙂
    I've just checked the wattage for the RTX3070Ti, and it draws 290W, so that's 65W more than the 225W supplied by the single cable (when within its max supply rating) plus the PCIe. So I'm sure I did the right thing, even though it probably isn't something a lot of folks would worry about. Better to be safe and max out the lifespan of my PC's components.

    • @snoop_official
      @snoop_official Před rokem +3

      Yo dawg, I feel ya. I always like to make sure my PC is runnin' at its optimal performance. You did the right thing by adding that extra cable. Ain't nothin' worse than havin' your PC not runnin' at its best. Keep on keepin' on, my man.

    • @ozpere
      @ozpere Před rokem +1

      Think about undervolting. I got my 3070TI undervolted to pull 220W on max load without any performance hit, and that's pretty conservative undervolt. Igor's lab did an undervolt on a 3070TI if you want to read that article. Though I still avoided the daisy chain :) My baby's getting everything.

    • @robertcochran7103
      @robertcochran7103 Před rokem

      You did the right thing. This is something I may have to correct on a quite old build that I did with an RTX 1070. I can't remember if it has only one power connector, or two, however....

    • @thmsbkr3
      @thmsbkr3 Před rokem +2

      Obviously, this is assuming your power supply is modular, but "If" the daisy-chain is a bit of an eye-sore for you then you can flip the cable around so there isn't a cable dangling in your case. You still only plug one cable into each slot of course, but the chain will be close to your power supply instead of right where your GPU is. That way your GPU will look like it has a single cable connection and it's much cleaner/easier to manage.
      I did have an older PSU where the cables weren't the same but nowadays pretty much every modular PSU I own I just flip them for the nice clean look.

    • @JohnCarlyle
      @JohnCarlyle Před rokem

      It's worth nothing however that despite the 150W 'spec', many PSU manufacturers allow for more power. Take a look at the Corsair 12VHPWR cable, it uses only 2x PCIe sockets, yet it can provide up to 600W to a 4090.

  • @pubgthang6993
    @pubgthang6993 Před 7 měsíci

    Thank you for these videos. its one thing to know what you're talking about, but to explain it to people like me who are just learning about pc building is so appreciated. You make it simple to understand, which is not easy, I'm sure.

  • @sleekEDITINGco
    @sleekEDITINGco Před 2 lety +398

    A good tip I have is to open the boxes for the parts as you go, don't open everything all at once especially if its your first time building a pc, start with the motherboard, then open cpu and work on installing it as soon as you take it out of the box, parts are less likely to get damaged when they are in the box and you are far less likely to misplace components under a mess of packaging. Also once you take your motherboard out of its box, put all of the warranty cards and manuals for the other parts into your motherboard box when you are done and keep the box. That one about the motherboard box has saved me on more than one occasion. It can also be a good idea to keep all of the boxes for all the components for at least a few months until you are sure they are all working correctly and none of them need to be returned as a malfunctioning part.
    And as a side note, don't forget a usb with the windows install tool if you are going with Windows OS, and have a spare device with internet on hand just incase you get stuck with a step and need to go and do some googling to work out what you are meant to do next if your user manuals aren't helping with that. The motherboard manuals can sometimes be poorly worded so it's good to be able to watch a CZcams video where someone explains it as they show it visually.

    • @darksci15
      @darksci15 Před 2 lety +8

      I want to give this all my thumbs up. Organization is KEY. 1st time or 100th time. 1st time organization means you can do it right. 100th time organization makes it faster.
      I just helped with a PC build and did some steps multiple times because parts were dumped on the table and I would find stuff and go "ooooh that's what we needed" or "what is this screw even for?" Not a good idea when it's your first time.

    • @taylorballard9422
      @taylorballard9422 Před 2 lety +1

      I just started getting into pc and you are 100 percent right. While working on vehicles or your house it's a lot easier and sometimes faster to just clean the mess afterwards. PC is a beast of its own. I didn't stay organized and it cost me like 3-4 hours of build time.

    • @Beus38
      @Beus38 Před 2 lety +2

      Very good point. I myself have been doing it like this all the time and it helps a lot - both organising the parts during the installation, and keeping the boxes. Especially keeping all the boxes - not just the papers for possible future reference. I just recently assembled a new rig for myself from scratch after two decades of working with laptops only (just building a computer for someone else every now and then), and managed to stack all the boxes inside the one big box from the case, so they all together only take as much space in my basement as a single computer case.
      Moreover, many components come with surplus parts intended for different types of installation/pairing component so you end up not using them, but it is good to keep them anyway, and here's where the original box comes handy. And, in case of replacing one or two components in the future, the boxes are also useful when selling the original components second hand - every second hand buyer will appreciate the original package with all the paperwork and spare/unused parts included :)

    • @Michael-hv9fb
      @Michael-hv9fb Před 2 lety

      LTT you mean 😂

    • @martinrwolfe
      @martinrwolfe Před rokem

      I find that the anti static bag the MB comes in quite usefull. While actualy building I usualy place the MB on the bag. During a break I will depending on how much extra clearance the bag has either put the MB back in the bag or just cover the MB with the bag.

  • @jaraado6533
    @jaraado6533 Před 3 lety +346

    Number 1 thing: Throwing away boxes of parts in your pc.

    • @steelkinq3708
      @steelkinq3708 Před 3 lety +33

      Very Importetant! if something dies, you might need the original box.

    • @chopthesuey2972
      @chopthesuey2972 Před 3 lety +10

      in germany you do NOT need the original box

    • @johnrussell7385
      @johnrussell7385 Před 3 lety +8

      also make youre you have a dedicated room to store all your pc parts hoarding lol I have 2 whole boxes of psu cables, hard drive cages zip ties case and mobo screws etc

    • @ishtamas9748
      @ishtamas9748 Před 3 lety +4

      Yes, I always put all the component boxes into the larger case box

    • @ClockworkWyrm
      @ClockworkWyrm Před 3 lety

      @Al 6r I'm not the only one!!!

  • @Christian-nn9zg
    @Christian-nn9zg Před 8 měsíci

    I have an old computer that I have maxed out everything on the motherboard besides the storage and GPU connected, I am glad you mentioned the GPU power supply because when checking my power supply yesterday to upgrade my GPU I noticed the pigtails and knowing how electricity works I knew I'd be limited power wise if I used them and didn't find the other harnesses for the power supply that I haven't needed. Good thing I keep stuff like that even 10+yrs later.

  • @jean-francoisleclerc5973
    @jean-francoisleclerc5973 Před 9 měsíci

    Awesome video and very helpful for new builders. I just build a new video editing PC. The only difference i made is the orientation of the fans on the radiator. More efficient the cooling process will be using colder air throughout the radiator. Air temp is typically colder outside the case vs inside. So the direction of the air flow is outside trough inside (recommended as per instructions). My build is using a Corsair 4000D with 3 120mm fans in the front and 1 at the rear. AIO is a Corsair H100i Elite PRO. This fan setup offers great cooling with a good airflow. On heavy load during 4K video rendering on premiere pro AIO coolant stays around 28-30 deg Celsius. That said if I was using RGB fans for the radiator the orientation would be the opposite.

  • @pandeer4987
    @pandeer4987 Před 3 lety +397

    Jayz: "the last thing you want to do is to create some crazy turbulence in your case"
    Airflow in my case: " hurricane katrina"

    • @YeetYT
      @YeetYT Před 2 lety +15

      Why did I read that as hurricane katana? Someone has been watching too much anime lately

    • @lavalodong2473
      @lavalodong2473 Před 2 lety +18

      More like hurricane tortilla

    • @kwatkins7272
      @kwatkins7272 Před 2 lety

      🤣😂🤣

  • @boebel23
    @boebel23 Před 3 lety +261

    My biggest mistake during my first build was assuming that all CPUs have integrated graphics.

    • @Zaiko112
      @Zaiko112 Před 3 lety +25

      Almost happened to me
      The Gpu was the last piece I bought, so, I was thinking, "I'll gonna assemble everything and install windows" well, doesn't work, a friend of mine relized that just in time and borrowed me his gpu.

    • @TreblebullFPV
      @TreblebullFPV Před 3 lety +23

      @@Zaiko112 Good friend!

    • @TheNerd
      @TheNerd Před 3 lety +2

      in reallity the opposite is the case. usually cpu's don't have iGPU's and there's just some with integrated graphics :D

    • @Smakheed
      @Smakheed Před 3 lety +1

      @@Zaiko112 lent

    • @TreblebullFPV
      @TreblebullFPV Před 3 lety +2

      @@TheNerd Don't intel pretty much have built in graphics?... Im out the loop on that one tbh, AMD guy myself.

  • @frich2k
    @frich2k Před rokem

    Thanks for these tips!
    I didn't know about the video card power cord mistake, so it's good that I swap them before any problem happened! Thanks! :D

  • @snickyb7113
    @snickyb7113 Před rokem

    This answered a ton of my questions. Thank you!

  • @CheapBastard1988
    @CheapBastard1988 Před 3 lety +68

    Don't forget to enable XMP.

    • @shimmyshimmyyah1518
      @shimmyshimmyyah1518 Před 3 lety +2

      im mean ehh how is anyone new suppose to know what xmp does though, Ram needs to be overclocked like 2400 and 2666 and ^

    • @resatchel4389
      @resatchel4389 Před 3 lety

      Jay had a video on this. It helped me solve my problem. Although I did have to update my mobo bios to allow thoes speeds.

    • @hapyhapyhapy4886
      @hapyhapyhapy4886 Před 3 lety

      Pro tip: Never mess with BIOS settings until you are sure your PC works properly on default settings. XMP or any overclock for that matter can lead to instability, and doing it without testing your system at base settings can save you a lot of unneccesary troubleshooting!

    • @ianwalters451
      @ianwalters451 Před 3 lety

      I have been running my Ryzen build for a few years without XMP.
      Every time I tried it quickly blue screened or rebooted during gameplay.
      I flashed the latest motherboard Bios and XML still didn't work.
      However a multiplier of 29.33 fixed it and gained me a massive gaming boost.

  • @unklegary
    @unklegary Před 3 lety +50

    Build videos like this should emphasize SAVE YOUR COMPONENTS PACKAGING. You’re going to upgrade your PC, and selling older components is viable and doing so in original packaging is so helpful for you and the buyer.
    Suggestion is to have some sort of storage container where you keep boxes, cables etc.

    • @wargas111
      @wargas111 Před 3 lety +6

      I re-use the box my case come in to store all the other components boxes. They are usually large enough to fit everyting, and you keep track of everything you put into that specific build in one place.

    • @kennethd4958
      @kennethd4958 Před 3 lety

      Great tip. It’s so nice having the original box when I upgrade parts to put the old part back in.

    • @drestnar
      @drestnar Před 3 lety

      I have all mine chilling in the PC Case boxes and skinnier ones in the monitor boxs. then they go in a corner or under the bed. This is great advice.

    • @johnpatz8395
      @johnpatz8395 Před 3 lety

      @@wargas111 that’s exactly what I do as well.

    • @Drewsterman777
      @Drewsterman777 Před 3 lety +1

      Also save the packaging just in case you need to RMA something for repair or replacement. Check the manufacturer warranty and at least keep it for that long.

  • @traviscox9775
    @traviscox9775 Před rokem +1

    He covers everything I thought of my first 2 builds!!. Awesome video !!!!

  • @Catarrhine
    @Catarrhine Před rokem

    THANK YOU! This is my first time building a PC, I didn't even think about the size of my GPU being an issue. I checked and it's well under the max size, so we're good, but I opted for a larger GPU with three fans and didn't even consider the limited space lol

  • @TriplePalindromous
    @TriplePalindromous Před 3 lety +71

    Remember to plug your HDMI into the graphics card and not the motherboard

    • @raywellington7048
      @raywellington7048 Před 3 lety +2

      Someone should have told me this before I build one last month. Almost broke down crying thinking I messed up my build because my monitor won’t display anything. Turns out I plugged in my HDMI to my motherboard. Definitely a rookie mistake.

    • @6rohit6
      @6rohit6 Před 3 lety

      True

    • @Lexion95
      @Lexion95 Před 3 lety

      Display port too?

    • @Journetta
      @Journetta Před 3 lety +1

      @@Lexion95 yes.. if you have a graphics card.. all monitor cables go INTO the graphics card..

    • @Journetta
      @Journetta Před 3 lety

      bruh the people who plug display cables into the motherboard when their cpu dont even have intergrated graphics... :(

  • @andermeep4007
    @andermeep4007 Před 3 lety +331

    Built my first pc this week, and didn't do a single thing wrong out of these. Feel great now thanks

  • @wallEeeeeeeE
    @wallEeeeeeeE Před 2 měsíci

    You provide on-the-point data and Im very thankful for that. I learned many things today.

  • @granolatimes7185
    @granolatimes7185 Před 3 lety +263

    The mistake I see thr most has to be "pulling the cpu off with the cooler" because the paste hardens. It really needs to be in every cooler manual to tell you to stress test you cpu before you attempt to remove the cooler and to TWIST before you pull

    • @TreblebullFPV
      @TreblebullFPV Před 3 lety +8

      Seriously this has to be up there. Great tip.

    • @liljendal20
      @liljendal20 Před 3 lety +5

      happened to me one time and I ruined a motherboard. Cpu was fine though, Great tip thats missing from the video!

    • @vadello
      @vadello Před 3 lety

      Great Tip!!

    • @opieman82
      @opieman82 Před 3 lety +7

      yes yes! I've done that before...scared the hell out of me lol...luckily everything was ok but still.......deff make sure its warmed up and twist before rocking or pulling!!!

    • @EnhancedTrashBin
      @EnhancedTrashBin Před 3 lety +4

      @@opieman82 Yeah I was like, "WTF it came out with my Noctua cooler??" Luckily for me aswell no pins looked bent or broken.

  • @Kivalt
    @Kivalt Před 2 lety +775

    Also, just to be safe, NEVER mix the cables from different PSUs. I burned two SSD drives because I used a couple of spare cables from a dead, stronger PSU. Turns out those cables were eager to spread death. I remember clearly me turning on the computer, then smelling melted plastic, seeing smoke come out, and yelling "OOH, NOOOO!".

    • @proudyy
      @proudyy Před 2 lety +11

      thx haven't tried it so far but good 2 know ^^

    • @aluckyshot
      @aluckyshot Před 2 lety +13

      Seen a similar comment on another video and it made me go buy replacement cables for one I was missing. Better safe than sorry.

    • @roland1332
      @roland1332 Před 2 lety +4

      Don't doubt that happened, but how does it jibe with his statement that a device DRAWS the power, the power is not pushed to it?

    • @KurtisQu
      @KurtisQu Před 2 lety

      @@roland1332 What are you saying

    • @roland7192
      @roland7192 Před 2 lety +3

      @@KurtisQu Displaying my ignorance about circuits. Jay reminded us that it’s the load that draws the power and since the load ( the SSD) doesn’t change just because you change a cable, why should the cable make any difference? Obviously, I gotta rethink that. Ignore my remark.

  • @hayesstrickland4171
    @hayesstrickland4171 Před rokem

    I know this is a little old but I'd like to see a video where you show how to start from scratch with picking components to build a system within a certain budget. I've done this with my two PCs and I think an unexperienced but enthusiastic PC person would love it.

  • @Elnis888
    @Elnis888 Před 4 měsíci

    Thanks a lot for the advice - very helpful!

  • @annihilatorg
    @annihilatorg Před 3 lety +126

    Put the exact number of stand-offs in their correct place. Never More.

    • @blackkingsize
      @blackkingsize Před 3 lety

      I don’t understand this one

    • @cCamCc
      @cCamCc Před 3 lety +23

      @@blackkingsize A stand off in a spot its not supposed to be in could be touching the back of the motherboard. With that, you could potentially ground and fry your board.

    • @einstijn138
      @einstijn138 Před 3 lety +11

      @@blackkingsize itx standoffs don't match the atx ones
      If you screw in an itx standoff and then put the motherboard on, it will touch the back of the motherboard and could cause a short circuit

    • @andresacosta5318
      @andresacosta5318 Před 3 lety +3

      @@einstijn138 had someone swap their mobo to go from a i7 920 to a i5 4590. However they didn’t change the standoffs and thankfully their cooler didnt fit so they brought it to us before ever turning it on. Idk how someone will take a motherboard with 9 screwholes, put only 2 screws and ignore the standoffs that are not lining up with anything and call it a day

    • @GlycerinZ
      @GlycerinZ Před 3 lety +2

      Also, make sure to use standoffs! The first time I built a PC back in 2000, i mounted the board directly to the case and fried all the fan headers.

  • @Faith_Soprano
    @Faith_Soprano Před 2 lety +672

    The scariest part is when you have your PC built by a store and THEY forget to remove the plastic from the CPU cooler, but you can't do anything about it because you'll void warranty if you remove the cooler, so you have to take it back to the store, surrender your system to them for 45 days, then have them tell you nothing's wrong.

    • @JazzCat_4TW
      @JazzCat_4TW Před 2 lety +19

      Oh nooo... 0.o

    • @SreenikethanI
      @SreenikethanI Před 2 lety +146

      Why is this suspiciously specific

    • @rossfisher8231
      @rossfisher8231 Před 2 lety +18

      Build it yourself next time

    • @nakedsnake4248
      @nakedsnake4248 Před 2 lety +53

      Dude imagine having a job building computers and you miss that.

    • @xTwilightWolvesx
      @xTwilightWolvesx Před 2 lety +41

      @@rossfisher8231 A little hard when standalone GPUs are like £3000 and pre-built GPUs are at MSRP.

  • @JoseJimenez-vp6xs
    @JoseJimenez-vp6xs Před 5 měsíci

    This is a good video for newbies, but I also had the same thinking in regards to the graphics card wiring. Thank you.

  • @pcplayerreacts1865
    @pcplayerreacts1865 Před 11 měsíci +1

    just built my 4th pc and man this one went super smooth and im just proud of it and so motivated to learn more and watch this vid

  • @johnfrian
    @johnfrian Před 3 lety +39

    Lesson learnt the hard way:
    Don't use cables from another PSU for your new PSU. Cables are NOT the same, even if they fit!
    Lost a HDD this way, being lazy and just reusing whatever sata power cable I had lying around. Being completely ignorant to this fact for years, it's a miracle I haven't killed more components.

    • @nofekun1889
      @nofekun1889 Před 3 lety

      Yes tnx for the remainder. I have two PSUs in my home and always make sure to keep the unused modular power cables as far away from each other. If they ever mix up, you are fucked up.

    • @Nolexe
      @Nolexe Před 3 lety +2

      Lost a GTX 1080 this way :)

    • @bismadewanto2741
      @bismadewanto2741 Před 3 lety +2

      Good thing i dont have the money to choose the modular one.

    • @nofekun1889
      @nofekun1889 Před 3 lety

      @@Nolexe sad

    • @scelusiasadventure2278
      @scelusiasadventure2278 Před 3 lety

      @@nofekun1889 what about extension sir, is it safe?

  • @MsMarcus118
    @MsMarcus118 Před 3 lety +86

    Plugging in HDMI or Display Port cable into Motherboard rather than plugging it into the graphics card (if they have one) - I have seen this a lot recently.

    • @pyttpytts2690
      @pyttpytts2690 Před 3 lety +4

      Because people are nicking the gpus =)

    • @thedeadexpert518
      @thedeadexpert518 Před 3 lety

      Lol. They're too used to Dell computers with no gpu in the first place. My dad has a Dell Inspiron that still runs Windows 7 and has no gpu(obviously, it's Dell). He would look at me plug hdmi into gpu and think: *What?*

  • @philtravers5552
    @philtravers5552 Před rokem

    Thanks Jay. Super informative

  • @Sgt_gh0st
    @Sgt_gh0st Před rokem +4

    My res was actually auto on 144 :) i learned about the GPU power cables in this video, awsome xD I am about to build a new pc for me, Lian li case (PC-O11 Dynamic) and i will have 10 120 fan slots... i will use the infinity fans on 7 to start with (probably using the default ones on the kraken z73 radiator to start with), but my question is, how do you think i should do the airflow considering i want as many as possible showing the fancy infinity mirrors in the center of the fans, which as you know only can be seen on the exhaust fans ;S any tip would be highly appreciated

  • @gustavoluisrodela
    @gustavoluisrodela Před 2 lety +577

    The thing that scared me the most when I first tried it was the amount of force you need to apply on that lever when installing intel cpus. It feels... wrong

    • @fred_2021
      @fred_2021 Před 2 lety +52

      Oh yes! That took me by surprise too. None of the videos prepared me for that :)

    • @stellviahohenheim
      @stellviahohenheim Před 2 lety +124

      Intel CPU's works best with bent pins

    • @BrawndoQC
      @BrawndoQC Před 2 lety +7

      YEah but I've built so many LGA builds never had an issue with that. Next AMD gen is gonna be LGA too (pins on mobo instead of chip).

    • @Viqtor
      @Viqtor Před rokem +18

      glad i wasnt the only one. thought I was breaking something for sure

    • @CivilCIA
      @CivilCIA Před rokem +17

      You tube helps a lot. I'm a visual learner, so watching others do it first helps a lot. If you got a question then CZcams has 1000 videos to answer you

  • @joeyelley7724
    @joeyelley7724 Před 3 lety +813

    coming back to this vid in 1 year when the market is running normally

    • @MrDisgruntledGamer1
      @MrDisgruntledGamer1 Před 3 lety +62

      It aint coming back to normal as long as covid is around, and that will stick around for years unfortunatly.

    • @Dragobrath
      @Dragobrath Před 3 lety +137

      1 year later you remember this comment and chuckle at how naive you were back then. Then you eat a rad roach and drink anti-rad afterwards to prevent poisoning.

    • @Elias-od2ik
      @Elias-od2ik Před 3 lety +3

      Nvidia said there’ll be shortages until at least Q.3

    • @_Hadda
      @_Hadda Před 3 lety +3

      Mostly likely these prices will be better than next years.

    • @neildoe1617
      @neildoe1617 Před 3 lety +8

      It's not all because of covid. It's because of many things. Not least of all is good ole fashion greed.