Tag Archive for 'Computers'

It’s Alive – The New Rig

My long planned system upgrade is finally complete, and I’m finally shot of the obsolete AMD socket 939 based system that I’ve been running with for the last four years.

As planned the system is based around the intel X58 chipset and an Intel Core i7 and I’ve tried to go for the highest rated parts that I could afford. I’ve kept my old graphics card and sound card as they should be more than capable, and if I were to replace them the cost would go up even further. I’ve also avoided buying any new external devices so that means I’ll be puttering along with that mangy old keyboard I’ve had since 1998 for a while longer.

  • Gigabyte GA-X58A-UD5 (Socket 1366)
  • Intel i7 930
  • 6GB Corsair  DDR3 1600MHz XMS3 Dominator Memory
  • 2x Samsung HD103SJ Spinpoint F3 1TB Hard Drive SATAII 7200rpm
  • BFG GTX260 OC2 Edition 896MB PCI-E Graphics Card
  • Creative Soundblaster Audigy 2 ZS
  • Antec CP850 850W Modular PSU
  • Antec 1200 Full Tower Case
  • Windows 7 Professional

Assembly took me about four hours or so on Sunday afternoon while watching Dragonslayer and Big Country Live at Rockplast for the ultimate geekout factor. There were no major hiccups, other than when I closed up the case, pressed the power button and then remembered that I hadn’t hooked up the supplementary power cables for the PCI-E graphics card. Needless to say I panicked a bit when it wouldn’t boot, but thankfully the Antec 1200 has a side window so I quickly realised what I had done.

So far Windows 7 seems to be a solid as a rock, and the whole machine operates smoothly. I’ve not really had a chance to test her yet, or do much in the way of optimisation, but I’m satisfied that she appears to be stable.

There have been a few incidents of the screen turning a solid light blue while windows keeps merrily running in the background. Since the only common elements between the new system and the one are the graphic and sound cards I can only assume that one of them is to blame. Given that the sound card wasn’t installed yet, as I had still to disable the onboard audio, I think it’s safe to say that the graphics card is probably to blame.

The system seems fairly stable just now, but I’m going to investigate the graphics card further once I’m satisfied with the rest of the system. As the problem is intermittent I need to try and figure out if there’s anything that specifically triggers the appearance of the blue screen.

That New PC Smell

After my complaints a couple of weeks ago I’ve finally overcome my infamous tendering process wiring and ordered the first bunch of parts for my planned computer upgrade. After years of buying middle of the road, or even the cheapest stuff, I’ve decided to be a bit less spenthrift, and a bit smarter about the parts that I intend to buy.

I can afford to splash out a bit this month as I’ve got some money left over due to not having to pay council tax the last couple of months. Not a fortune, but enough that I can get the case and power supply sorted out.

I’ve opted for a monster of a case though. The Antec 1200 (you can see a good review of it here) which weighs in at a back breaking 14.5kg, and that’s before you put anything in it. I’m sure my folks are going to be really amused when the courier turns up at their front door with it. It’s huge, its got lots of fans and I think it looks great.

I’ve hummed and hawed about power supplies. You have to admit that they’re hardly the most glamorous pieces of machinery. of building a new machine, and you’re often tempted to buy any old stock unit because of that. The trouble is a computer is a sensitive piece of electronics that can react very badly to variations in current and voltage in a way a kettle or washing machine wont. I’ve learned from harsh experience that buying a cheap unbranded power supply is akin to buying an engine from a scrappy, throwing it in your Maserati Grand Turismo and hoping that it goes like a rocket.

It wont.

I had originally settled on getting a Coolermaster power supply. They’ve a sound reputation, give good clean voltage and current output, and get great reviews everywhere I look. I did have doubts however, given the size of the Antec 1200, that the cables on a standard ATX form factor power supply would be long enough to reach all the places it would be needed to go. It’s no use having enough power if the cables can’t reach the drive bays.

It turns out that Antec themselves have anticipated the problems, and possibilities, of their larger cases and have produced the CP series power supply. The CP series are an odd divergance from the usual ATX style power supply. They’re larger and can use heavier duty components, but their size means they’re only compatible with certain Antec cases. At the moment they come in two types an 850w unit and a 1,000w monster.  I opted for the CP-850 as the 1,000w unit seems like overkill for my requirements.

Finally I found I had slightly more money spare that I realised so I decided to steam on and add two Samsung HD103SJ Spinpoint F3 1TB hard disks to the order. I would need to get them eventually as it would be extremely counter-productive to put tired old IDE drives in a sparkling new build.

The order is away. Now all I have to do is sit back and await like a modern day Conan on my throne of faux leather.

2010 State Of The PC Address

There seems to be something going horribly wrong with my PC recently and I’m having trouble pinning down the source of the problems. I know that I’ve posted before about my “nebulous concerns”, but this time it really seems that something serious is going wrong.

Admittedly the whole system has been temperamental at times.Sometimes during start up the screen turns solid black, but windows still appears to be running the background. I hear the windows start up sound, and there’s hard disk activity. If I press the Caps Lock key the Caps Lock light turns on and off on the keyboard, and it’s sometimes possible to shut the machine down blind with the keyboard. Other times the screen is blank, but the Caps Lock key doesn’t work so I have to turn the system off manually and hope for the best. There are more severe occasions when the system is either in the process of booting, or has just reached the windows desktop, that the screen will suddenly turn a solid light blue and halts instantly.

The worst of it started about a week ago the whole machine repeatedly refused to boot to the Windows XP desktop at all. I could see a Blue Screen of Death flashing up during the windows start up phase, but it flashed past too fast for me to be able to read it. This happened repeatedly even when I attempted to boot in safe mode, or even the command prompt safe mode. I sat and watched as it rebooted, blue screened and then restarted endlessly. I gave up in the huff and ElKay and I decided to nip out to get some dinner. She predicted it would probably be OK by the time we got back, and it seemed she was right when it booted up first time on our return. The system seemed stable, and didn’t display any odd symptoms for the rest of the night, but the following day when i turned it on to check my emails I was instantly greeted by the Light Blue Screen of Doom. I rebooted, but the Light Blue screen appeared again, and again, and again. I think it did it about twelve times in all before the system finally started up.

The final confirmation that something was seriously wrong occurred not long after I finally got the machine running again. I had fired up Silent Hunter V to have a game. Now firstly let me say that Silent Hunter 5 hasn’t been the most stable of games on my machine anyway. It seems to crash semi-regularly, taking the whole system with it, but I had assumed that this was a fault of the game rather than the system. The Ubisoft forums are alive with reports of random crashes and odd bugs within the game so it seemed a fair assumption at the time. That was until the entire system turned itself off just after I had launched two torpedoes towards a fat British Tanker wallowing somewhere off the Essex coast.

I sat there a bit dumbfounded and murmured, “Holy fuck what just happened?”

OK, so Silent Hunter’s a bit unstable I though, but no matter how unstable a game is I’ve never seen it turn the computer off. I tried to start it up, but had some trouble getting windows to boot. Light blue screens, and odd crashes galore. It took three or four attempts to get the thing to boot up properly, but after it was started it seemed entirely stable. Maybe it was just a power fluctuation from the electricity supply. I booted up Dawn of War 2 instead, and I’ve played it for hours on end before without issue, but after about 40 minutes of chewing up alien monsters the PC suddenly turned off AGAIN.

Weird, and concerning.

Normally when a PC shuts itself off, and especially if the PC has been under heavy load as it would be during 3D games, it means that something, somewhere, is probably dangerously overheating. It’s usually not immediately obvious if it’s the CPU, RAM, Northbridge or something else on the motherboard, but most modern components include some kind of internal temperature sensor. I tried running RIVATuner while playing Silent Hunter 5 with it set to monitor fan duty cycles, internal GPU temperature and a host of other things. After an hour or so nothing seemed particularly untoward with the performance of the game, and there was no sign of crashing. I exited and consulted the RIVATuner logs. The fan never ran about 50% duty cycles, and the temperatures remained well within normal operating ranges for the card.

No problem there then.

I ran a couple of CPU monitoring programs that I had and descended into the briny deep of Silent Hunter once more. The CPU was a bit hot, but not outside a reasonable range for running a complex 3D game. It seems unlikely, given these results, that the problem is heat related, but of course I can’t rule that out. I’ve toyed with the idea of getting a new cpu cooler, but that will have to wait till I can research them better. I don’t want to end up buying a lemon and making things worse rather than better.

The appearance of these symptoms, and their disappearance, seems entirely random. I’ve made no changes to the hardware since the installation of my new power supply and the 260GTX graphics card back in. I’ve been wondering for some time if maybe the Coolermaster eXtreme Power 650W power supply that I bought to  isn’t quite up to the job. The BFG 260GTX OC that I’ve got is pretty power hungry, and the AMD Athlon64 4200+ isn’t a slouch either. The eXtreme Power should be sufficient to power everything on paper, but as we all know theory is often difficult to translate into practical reality.

Finally, after everything else seemed to be discounted I considered that the odd crashing may be evidence of a virus, but after exhaustively scanning each and every disk both via windows, and using f-prot via Knoppix, which was an interesting refresher on Linux I might add, I’m fairly certain that there aren’t any nasty bugs infecting the machine. I don’t make a habit of downloading things from untrusted sources so I wasn’t surprised that nothing showed up.

Ultimately I think I could spend days pulling the machine apart, scrutinizing every little part of it, in the vain hope of maybe discovering the underlying cause of the instability. I think though, as a long term solution, I’ll be looking into upgrading and replacing the majority of the system’s components before the end of the year.

A Long Time Ago…

I just discovered the disk for Star Wars: X-Wing Alliance buried at the bottom of one of my drawers and it’s got me thinking about the potential that was missed with the game. Don’t get me wrong though, it was an excellent addition to the venerable X-Wing game series, but it could have been much much more than just another space fighter game.

In X-Wing Alliance, or XWA as it’s known to fans, you play the role of the unfortunately named Ace Azzameen the youngest son of an outer rim merchant family. You spend much of the start of the game cutting about aboard a battered old freighter doing missions for various members of your family before inevitably joining the Rebel Alliance. While in the alliance though you occasionally have to head home to help out your family with transport jobs, rescue missions and so on using the family space freighters. It adds an interesting bit of variety to the battles against the dastardly Galactic Empire.

What I would love to see though would be a game based in the Star Wars universe that combined elements of the X-Wing games, and space trader games like Elite and the X series.

I know that there is sort of an element of this already in the MMORPG Star Wars Galaxies, and possibly in the forthcoming Star Wars: The Old Republic, but these feel clumsy and bolted on instead of being the core of the game play.

What I would love to see is a game where you can traverse the Star Wars Galaxy, or even a small part of it, at will. Trading, privateering, blockade running and carrying out random missions for various factions. As the player grows richer they can invest in upgrades, hire new associates, buy increasingly powerful ships and eventually end the game with a vast fleet, space installations and a fortune in credits.

I’m surprised nobody has thought to develop a game like this yet.

Incidentally I love Wookiepedia the Star Wars Wiki site. I could probably spend days reading it and never get bored.

Christmastide Computing Concerns

I’ve got a horrible feeling that my computer is going to keel over very soon. At this very minute I can hear some kind of ungodly racket coming from one of the internal fans even as I type. I can’t make up my mind if it’s the graphics card, or something else. The graphics card going wonky would probably be one of my biggest fears as it’s only a year old and cost about two hundred quid. It’s also the most likely candidate as it’s currently very poorly sited inside the case as you can see from these pictures.

Puter01

Puter02

The airflow over it is very restricted by the fact that I was forced to position the hard disks right at the front of it. A problem caused by both the design of the case and the size of the GTX 260 itself. I’m not an expert on the airflow thing, but I think air is being drawn in from the front of the case, over the close packed hard disks and from there into the intake fan of the graphics card. So basically this monster card is breathing in air that’s already fairly hot.  Couple that with the dusty, half heartedly cleaned floor I’ve got around it I’m almost certain that the GTX’s fans are the ones crashing away.

Thing is it’s been fine through the summer so I don’t know why it’s started going nuts now that winter is here and the flat is colder than a penguin’s fridge on a cold Arctic night.

Hopefully this isn’t the start of some horrible new sequence of breakdowns as having the bike out of action is bad enough, but if the computer goes I’ll be left having to watch television for my amusement, and that’s a fate worse than death!

Open Office

After a few false starts I’ve installed, and actually used, Open Office for the first time today. In fact I’ve even used it for a bit of rough sketched up structure work for my ambitious novel writing project. I don’t fancy trying to start writing such a huge piece of work without some kind of plan, and it gives me a convenient excuse to start testing out Open Office.

So far everything seems to be going swimmingly. In fact I would hazard to say that the only obvious difference between Microsoft Word and Open Office’s Writer is the price. Functionally they appear almost identical, which is no doubt intentional on the part of Open Office’s designers, but it does make the transition from one system to the other that much easier.

I’m somewhat surprised that major organisations haven’t caught onto the major savings that they could make by using a virtually free, open sourced software package. It seems at first glance to be a total no brainer. Either pick a version of Microsoft office and pay thousands of pounds for each site license, or install a free piece of software that’s regularly updated and improved.

I haven’t tested out the other parts of open office yet. So I can’t comment on the database, spreadsheet and presentation software, but I’ll give them a go later and see what they’re like. Who knows I may even find myself reaching for the uninstall link for MS office.

An Expensive Hobby

I’m a greedy man I think as I’m constantly looking at the price of components on ebuyer.com with an eye on improving my PC. I’ve not got much spare cash right now, and with Christmas approaching I’ll need to set some aside for presents, but I’m still plotting and planning and dreaming of a massive upgrade. I know it’s only been about a year since the last time I carried out some upgrades, but I’m planning a more comprehensive overhall this time. The old dual core AMD Athlon that I’ve got is starting to act quite tired, and windows XP is slowly choking to death under the bloat of installed crap that I’ve never got round to removing.

I’ve even gone as far as going through all the review websites and checking out what would give me the best bang for my buck.  Tom’s Hardware and Tech Radar have been particularly helpful as ever. I’ve not gone overboard and went for the best of stuff, but I have tried to pick things that will last quite a long time and dramatically improve the current performance of my machine.

So far my plans are shaping up like this:

Intel Core i7 920 D0 – £214.87

ASUS P6T Deluxe V2 iX58 – £202.30

Antec 902 Nine Hundred Two Black ATX Case – £86.99

Samsung SpinPoint F1 HD103UJ 1TB Hard Drive x2 – £116.22

Corsair 6GB (3x2GB) DDR3 1600MHz XMS3 – £133.21

Grand Total: – £753.59

Unfortunately that’s far to steep for my current financial situation. In fact for that price I could more or less get the MacBook that I’m always humming and hawing about, or I could even buy a complete computer from Mesh or some of the other specialist gaming PC retailers. Advantages being that I would get the whole package with a warranty, and various other peripherals included in the price.

I’ve already got a copy of windows 7 professional that I bought, so it would be a simple matter to wipe all the preinstalled crap off a shop bought machine and set it up however the hell I like.