greenmedic88 said:
The next time you rebuild, it probably will take you half the time or less since you're familiar with the process. If or when you decide to get into overclocking, you will be rebuilding (replace stock CPU cooler, quality thermal interface material) since most decent aftermarket CPU coolers will require you to pull the motherboard (have a back plate for mounting). While it's out, look up examples of cable management online to see how you can arrange all wiring behind the motherboard or neatly zip-tied against flat surfaces of the case. All excess SATA cable lengths should be rolled and zip-tied out of the way as well. It's not just for aesthetics; good cable management will help airflow, necessary for air cooled overclocked systems. Personally, unless this PC is your toy and you don't actually need it for productivity (a novel idea), I'd just leave it running at stock clocks or with a mild overclock if you can keep your temps low. Lian Li cases are very nice, but don't exactly have the best airflow for extreme overclocking anyway. |
At this point I doubt I'll be doing any overclocking, but you never know what can happen in a couple years. I just strapped whatever cables I didn't use up top in front of the power supply. I didn't really think about strapping them to the side of the case to facilitate airflow.
I will mostly be using this PC for school/work stuff and games, so I think it'll be fine without overclocking for now. Thanks for the tips =)