So, I'm planning on buying this card: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16814162016 at the end of the month for my Inspirion 530s.
I keep hearing something about PSU and watts, etc.
Will my computer be able to run this card with no problem?
So, I'm planning on buying this card: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16814162016 at the end of the month for my Inspirion 530s.
I keep hearing something about PSU and watts, etc.
Will my computer be able to run this card with no problem?
Reputation: 733We can't help if we don't know how much watt and amp your PSU gives. ._.
[My Anime List] | [last.fm] | [xfire] | [Steam]
I should update this but all my effort went into writing this lousy excuse.
Reputation: 66I'd rather get this if you had to go low profile and stock PSU.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16814102829
Reputation: 733
[My Anime List] | [last.fm] | [xfire] | [Steam]
I should update this but all my effort went into writing this lousy excuse.
Reputation: 66Open up your case and look at your PSU. If it gives an indirect amount of amps, take the total power, subtract by ~80(they usually overrate it, like it says 500W, but it can only supply 300W, mostly in OEM PCs) and divide that number by 12 and there's your AMP. For example, my PSU gives off 588 from my 12v rail. 588 divided by 12(from your 12v rail line) and it equals 49, there's my amps, it's 49. If yours have more than one 12v rails, take the total watts it's rated as, subtract ~80W(explained by before) and divide by 12 and there's your COMBINED amps from your multiple 12v rails.
EDIT: Dam you SnOw, you beat me to it, but yours doesn't include multi-rails.
Uh, lemme see here...
250w, it says?
Reputation: 66I decided to look up some 250W PSUs and apparently, the average is 13 amps. So expect yours to be somewhere around there, + a few amps.
Reputation: 733
[My Anime List] | [last.fm] | [xfire] | [Steam]
I should update this but all my effort went into writing this lousy excuse.
What about the card Sakumo suggested? http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16814102829
I saw some benchmarks for it, and it seems to do great on most games. Plus, I need something cheap anyway.
Reputation: 66Bah, I listened to the manufacturer's power minimum for my card and it said 500W, some people ran it on a 400W Corsair AND a quad. I could have ran my computer fine on a 550W from Corsair, but I had to listen to EVGA's power listing, also, they usually test on an intensive system and that's usually the amount to cover it.
Reputation: 733
[My Anime List] | [last.fm] | [xfire] | [Steam]
I should update this but all my effort went into writing this lousy excuse.
Reputation: 66I agree you shouldn't be cheap on the PSU, but if it's enough, why pay for more if you don't need to? Also, I've seen many people with a GTX 260 on the Corsair 400W, of course it's pushing their luck sometimes, but the 4650 consumes a lot less than a GTX 260. And many people run a 4670 on a stock PSU from Dell/HP.
Reputation: 733
[My Anime List] | [last.fm] | [xfire] | [Steam]
I should update this but all my effort went into writing this lousy excuse.
Hm.
Well, seeing as my parents are going to buy it for me, I don't want to make them spend so damn much on a PSU and a card. I'll take the Radeon HD card, seeing as I've read comments about it and many have run it without having to buy a new PSU, etc.
So, I'll go with the Radeon.