That's precisely why I changed to this CPU. My system is much more silent and cooler now.the big diff between it is the heat generation. The 13400 is much much easier to cool
There are 3D-printed side panel extensions if you google it, maybe those can help.Hey guys. Any way to fit Asus RTX 4070 Dual OC? Length is fine, but thickness in 0.5cm more. I am disappointed...
Unfortunately 7700xt and 7800xt are both 50mm width. It won't fit.No better one than the RX6800 yet.
7700XT is slower and has only 12GB VRAM - 7800XT is slightly faster but i doubt we will see a 2 slot model in the near future.
Edit: It seems that the 7800XT reference is indeed a 2-slot design. https://wccftech.com/amd-radeon-rx-7800-xt-radeon-rx-7700-xt-gpus-leak-ahead-of-launch/
I also had that card within the Dan A4 (see page 219 of this thread) but returned it, as one fan had a ticking sound and it ran a bit too hot for my taste at load and also got noisy above 70'C. This made me think that 200w should be the max here and the 4070 seems ideal, being the gpu with the most performance at this consumption.I run an Inno3D 3070ti in my A4 and it runs cool and quiet, assisted by a bottom intake fan, riser standoffs, and a conservative undervolt. That’s a 290W card, so I‘d think the 4070ti (285W) would be at home in the A4 too.
I have the Inno3d 4070 Ti and with just a mild undervolt mine sees a max temp of 67C with only 165W power draw. Fan speed is at 40% so it is also very quiet.I also had that card within the Dan A4 (see page 219 of this thread) but returned it, as one fan had a ticking sound and it ran a bit too hot for my taste at load and also got noisy above 70'C. This made me think that 200w should be the max here and the 4070 seems ideal, being the gpu with the most performance at this consumption.
Sorry, page 218I have the Inno3d 4070 Ti and with just a mild undervolt mine sees a max temp of 67C with only 165W power draw. Fan speed is at 40% so it is also very quiet.
Your build came out good. Building in a SFF case can be challenging, espeically one as small as the A4-SFX. Here is an adapter you can use that will connect the USB 3.0 header to the USB type C front panel. Cable management can be tough, you did very well but if you don't mind spending a bit some unsleeved custom cables make a huge difference in cable management and will help improve airflow on that bottom fan.After i asked for advice a month ago i build my first sff pc and it was harder than i thought. These are the components i bought:
Case: Dan A4 4.1
CPU: Ryzen 5 5600
Mainboard: Gigabyte B550i Aorus Pro Ax
GPU: PowerColor Fighter RX 6650 XT
PSU: Corsair SF750 SFX
Storage: WD_Black SN770 1TB
RAM: Corsair Vengeance 32 GB DDR4-3200
CPU-Cooler: Noctua NH-L9a-AM4
Fan: Noctua NF-A9x14 PWM
Fan: Noctua NF-A9 PWM
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I watched countless build videos, read a lot of posts and thought i was fully prepared, but i was not.
1. The PCI riser cable was bent in such a way that it was impossible to put the NF-A9x14 underneath. I read that you could bend the cable with a hairdryer, but i didn't want to risk damaging it and don't really know how hard you can bend it before it breaks. I decided to not install the fan.
2. I tried to use the anti vibration mounts of the NF-A9 fan, but couldn't get them all the way through the top, even with tweezers. After a lot of tries i used the normal screws.
3. I thought installing the M.2 SSD would be easy, but the mainboard differs from other mainboards as it has a small part on the left side that you need to take off with a pair of pliers. Nothing about this is in the manual. I found one Youtube Video of a guy explaining this.
4. I read that the fins of the CPU cooler should be installed vertically for better airflow, but i could only install it horizontally as there wasn't enough space to put it any other way.
5. The case has a USB port that i can't connect to my mainboard. I think i need an adapter for this.
6. At first I didn't know which cable to put in which PSU slot. The labeling is stylish, but confused me. I thought i could damage everything, if i get it wrong.
7. Cable management is very, very hard.
In the end everything worked out. It even booted on first try and the temperatures are also good. I love this case. It is really beautiful and the size is amazing. It was just harder to build a sff pc than i initially thought.
Thanks for the link to the adapter, i'll definitely buy one. As this is more of a low budget build i don't know if i'll add custom cables, but it is nice to know that this option exists.Your build came out good. Building in a SFF case can be challenging, espeically one as small as the A4-SFX. Here is an adapter you can use that will connect the USB 3.0 header to the USB type C front panel. Cable management can be tough, you did very well but if you don't mind spending a bit some unsleeved custom cables make a huge difference in cable management and will help improve airflow on that bottom fan.
I can highly vouch and recommend the PSlate customs cables that @rfarmer posted above. I've used them in every SFF build I've done; A4 SFX, Meshlicious, NCASE M1, NR200P and FormD T1. It makes an massive amount of difference, especially in the A4 SFX. After purchasing and installing them, I was mad at myself for not getting them earlier. Much nicer aesthetic overall and less cable mess. You'll have an considerable amount of space in the case empty if going with those cables. Just an FYI here for youThanks for the link to the adapter, i'll definitely buy one. As this is more of a low budget build i don't know if i'll add custom cables, but it is nice to know that this option exists.