Meh, I like the case. I may want a bigger one if I can find it to spread out the heat a bit more. The PSU is Quad-SLi ready.
Doesn't mean it's up to the job of three 8800GTXs though. I own that PSU and it's good, but personally I think you're cutting it a bit fine.
Yes but you can quad SLI with a pair of 7950s can't you? I'm guessing that's less power than three 8800GTXs. The PSU is certified for quad SLI, doesn't say what though does it?
yes, but one GTX draws quite alot of power, and don't mention 3 GTX it's a 3 high end card and newer technology than 7950, and since 7950 is 2 cards. But you have a point there. two HD3870 X2 draws increadible amount of power. 9800GT qill support 3 way sli, it's a 8800GT with an extra connector thing.
3 cards still draws more than 2 cards even if it's a dual core. High end 9-series will probably draw much much more.
9600GT can't support 3-way sli, thats just too bad, other wise thats a good option. I'm waiting for Nvidia's new 9800GTX, if it's way better than ATI cards then i'll go for a 780i chipset mobo and Nvidia card, basically a nvidia build. If the difference aren't too far apart then i'll get HD3870 X2.
I'm not averse to getting an nvidia card despite the image quality loss (since the image quality of the 3800s is marred by the fact that most of the time catalyst can't draw 2D without corrupting it) but I'm staying away from nvidia chipsets. The P35 runs so much better and cooler than the 650i.
but i'm planning on SLi-ing if nvidia cards are better and cheaper. i'm wondering when intel chipset will support SLI. some mobo manu tried making intel chipset support sli, but it didn't go too well
I doubt it will ever happen properly, but really, I don't consider SLI worth the money, even with graphics cards being as cheap as they are now. Don't forget, the electricity to run the cards costs more than the things themselves now. If you game for 6 hours a day but leave your PC running the rest of the time, an additional 9600GT will set you back £70 a year in this country. An additional 8800GTX will set you back an extra £100 a year.
Then i'll have to kinda wait for Gigabytes P45 chipset, then it should have 1 PCI-E instead od 2 just like P35, but it support PCI-E 2.0
Big whoop, you spent an extra hundred quid to have a case that's slightly more imposing. Not everyone is willing to spend £150 on a case that's generally pretty unremarkable. half of the design choices in the A10B are in the half-as-pricey Antec P182, and the build quality of that is also excellent. The RC-690 I chose isn't badly made either, and it would probably cool better. There are plenty of people out there who adore Lian Li cases, I know a few, but to a lot of people, the extra expense seems ludicrous, and I'm included in that group. A lot of people thought I was mad to pay £85 for my case, let alone nearly double it for that one.
not forgetting my better mobo, and having 4GB ram in only 2 slots, and arguebly the better PSU what do others think?