Best Custom Gaming PC Built Center.We offer the best custom built desktops/workstations in global for gaming, video editing etc., We also publish riddles.
Don't wanna be here? Send us removal request.
Text
Assembling a computer yourself is the best way to learn about how it works. It’s also an art.
Boot It Up and Install Windows
The final step of your building is an easy one: press the power button. If the PC whirs to life, you're actually perfectly putting it together! However, if it doesn't, don't despair. There are a number of possible issues that could cause a PC for the first time to fail to boot up. This Kingston video goes over some pitfalls that might cause you some headaches, so give it a watch and retrace your steps if you are not able to boot your PC.There's also a risk that you may have obtained defective parts. Some tips on how to check your components are covered in this video.
However, if it just started well, the next step is super easy: turn it off. Do you remember the Windows flash drive that you made earlier? Plug it in and boot it up again on the PC. It should just do its thing and get started if you set it up correctly. You will need to open your BIOS (check the manual for your motherboard to do that) and first set the USB drive to be a "boot device" though. Here's a quick overview of this method, beginning at phase 3.
You Did It!
Congratulations on building your first PC. It's a bit complicated process, but it's a great way to spend a day Or a couple of days, depending on your time. And now that we're all inside, you can use your PC to help you spend all those hours productively
IF YOU HAVE ANY CONFUSIONS VISIT MY ARTICLES
0 notes
Text
Assembling a computer yourself is the best way to learn about how it works. It’s also an art. PART-2
PLACING IT All Together We’re not going too far into the weeds here, because the internals of every PC are a little different, but in general, here’s how you should go about putting all these components together. Firstly, plan a clean workspace for yourself. This can be a dining room table, a cleared-off desk, or any surface wide enough for your case to lie flat on its side, for the rest of your components with ample space around it. You're also going to need a Phillips-head screwdriver that suits your case's screws. Be sure to discharge any static buildup when you bring these parts together and act like a wood table on a non-metallic surface. Or on top of the cardboard box it comes in, you might only assemble the motherboard. Most of the parts you purchased are going to come with manuals for instruction; keep them handy. We're going to begin with the motherboard, so open up the installation page with the instruction manual. There's a lot to look at, but think of all of this as a huge Lego set. It can be pretty overwhelming. Each piece fits one piece into the other. Your first task with the motherboard will be seating your CPU. Planting your CPU Depending on the processor you have purchased either AMD or INTEL.The processor will have either little prongs on one side(don’t touch them) or little golden contacts on one side(don’t touch them), depending on what kind of CPU you bought. Seriously, don't hit your chip on that side. Oils from the tips of your fingers may affect the contacts, or a pin may be bent. Do either one, and nothing more than a pricey hunk of silicon becomes your processor. Placing your Processor is very easy.Next, double-check the instructions for your motherboard to make sure you've unlocked the processor socket. It's going to be a large square with a bunch of little holes next to it, with a lever or button. The instructions for your motherboard will specifically state how to open the socket so that you can bring your processor in without any problems. If you've checked it's unlocked and ready, just figure out which corner has a little golden triangle in your processor and line it up on the processor socket of your motherboard with the same symbol. Lower the processor into the socket gently, then flip the latch or locking mechanism gently. You're not going to have to fight it. Double-check that the processor is correctly socketed if you have to click very hard. Next, you need thermal paste. For this step, the little tiny plastic silvery goo syringe is very important. Take a glance at the glossy square of silicon in the middle of it now that your processor is seated. This is where your heat sink will be sitting. Your processor comes with a heat sink, and you'll see a copper circle on one side of it. After we add the thermal paste, with the silicone square and the copper circle lined up perfectly, you can put the heat sink directly on top of the processor.
Go ahead and carefully squeeze into the silicon square on your processor a small ball of thermal paste (no bigger than a pea). As close to the middle as you can get, you'll want it. Now line up your heat sink and gently lower it into position with the screws that surround your processor. The thermal paste would be squished, and the purpose here is to create a thin layer covering the back of your processor. If it oozes a little bit, it's OK, but if it oozes out and over the processor's edge, you've used too much. Get some isopropyl alcohol, dab it on a lint-free wipe, and wipe down the heat sink and the processor. Wait for them to dry thoroughly and try again. Screw your heat sink into place if it looks all right. Flip back to your instruction book for your motherboard and find the right spot near the processor socket to plug in the cooling fan of your heat sink. It needs to be very close to the socket of your processor. Plug it in once you've found it, and congratulations, you've just installed a CPU. The toughest part was this, and it's over friend, nice work. Installing Your Motherboard and Power Supply It is formulaic to the rest of this.
0 notes
Text
Assembling a computer yourself is the best way to learn about how it works. It’s also an art. PART -1
IF YOU'VE BEEN beating yourself up for doing nothing constructive during quarantine, don't. Often nothing is exactly what you need. Other times, it’s good to make something with your own hands. That’s what this guide is about:how to create a PC from scratch. It can be overwhelming for a lot of reasons—it’s costly, it’s complicated, it can get chaotic. But I want to be clear: If you can build a table, bookshelf, bed, or anything that comes in more than one of those unsettlingly heavy flatpacks, you can make a PC.
What Do You Need?
No matter what your experience level is, you can use 'pick your parts' to shop. It has everything you need to build your PC piece by piece right there.
The components you need are going to be the same regardless of what kind of PC you're creating (office space or playing games). A motherboard, a CPU, storage, memory, a power supply, a case, and a monitor will be needed. If you mainly use this PC for home office works, the only thing you do not need is a GPU, but it is required for picture or video editing and gaming. That's a great deal of stuff. Here’s a little breakdown of what each component does, along with some hardware recommendations.
Motherboard
The motherboard is a printed circuit board that is the largest board in a computer chassis and the base of a computer. It allocates power and allows connectivity to and between the CPU, RAM, and all other computer hardware components.
Suggested Hardware
CPU
The CPU is the primary component of a computer that processes instructions. It runs the operating system and applications, constantly receiving input from the user or active software programs.
Graphics Card
You will need a graphics processing unit, or GPU, if you're playing games on this PC. This is a specialised processor built and optimised for the handling of visual details, such as game graphics. In video and photo editing, and other graphics-intensive functions, it is often used. These cards are difficult at times to find in stock (or at a fair price), so you may have to wait a while.
Storage
This is where you store all your files, your games, your movies, your documents, your photos, your everything. You can always upgrade f more storage later if you need it.
RAM
Memory is more like that one table you toss things on to deal with later. It’s scratch paper a in short-term. It’s very important, though, because software uses memory to cache (temporarily memory) data in a place it can be retrieved very quickly while on and off (or) in saving your work.
Power Supply
Your power supply is a box that keeps the electricity running to each and every component in the PC. Faster PC needs more power, and you always want to have a little more than you need, just in case. Just like GPUs are also a little hard to find right now.
Case
You can pick any of the case depend on the usage you need and the design.It might be covered in glass panels and etched aluminum, but inside it’s just a big metal box that holds everything together
Operating System
Most of the PC users use Windows os .So,You'll have to buy a license from Microsoft or another vendor and make a CD or USB key to install it.
PLACING IT All Together We’re not going too far into the weeds here, because the internals of every PC are a little different, but in general, here’s how you should go about putting all these components together. Firstly, plan a clean workspace for yourself. This can be a dining room table, a cleared-off desk, or any surface wide enough for your case to lie flat on its side, for the rest of your components with ample space around it. You're also going to need a Phillips-head screwdriver that suits your case's screws. Be sure to discharge any static buildup when you bring these parts together and act like a wood table on a non-metallic surface. Or on top of the cardboard box it comes in, you might only assemble the motherboard.
0 notes
Text
Explore the art of building your own pc.You read right buildyourself
https://letscustomizepc.blogspot.com/
1 note
·
View note