Thanks for clearing that up, I thought thats what you meant.
As far as power, the tower came with a 300 watt power supply but I can't believe it would use that much. Also, as far as ATI cards go, I'm starting to see just how expensive the PSUs are above 750w.
- Is there any way to calculate the usage of the CPU, fan, etc? I know the power usage of the GPUs obviously.
- If I already have this NVIDIA card that runs at 500watt, should I just return it and get an ATI? Is there any doubt it wouldn't be compatible?
- I've been looking at the chart(s) but is there a general rule of thumb regarding model numbers (eg. 7750 vs 6750 vs 5850) when it comes to MH/s per watt?
- I can't seem to find much about what the card identifiers actually mean. I'm wondering if the first number is a _____ then that means it's ______.
1; There are various statistics and information out there for every computer component, if you want to check the entire usage of your own computer, yourself and to a precise value you can get yourself one of these;
Kill A Watt / AmazonOtherwise, a quick google search or trawl of a reputable forum such as
http://overclock.net will reveal the right range of Wattages for your components.
2; I doubt that Nvidia card runs at 500W, that's just the recommended minimum power supply Wattage for the card. From what I can see and attain, the NVIDA GTX 650 Ti BOOST runs a maximum load wattage of around 240-250W.
The minimum recommended is usually a good guideline of the overall sort of powersupply your computer should have. The 500W is to allow for CPU/HDDs/Fans/etc on top of the GPU load Wattage.
In terms of compatibility, you needn't worry. If your Motherboard has a PCIe x16 slot (Which it clearly has for your 650 Ti) then ANY PCIe device (GPU/RAID card/Sound card/etc) will work.
The restriction is on the software and drivers to the Operating System, not the Hardware itself. And given how ALL modern GPUs have support in Windows, I doubt you'll ever expect an issue.
Just remember to download and install the correct software package/drivers for whichever GPUs you use;
ATI/AMD:
http://support.amd.com/en-us/downloadNvidia:
http://www.nvidia.co.uk/Download/index.aspx3; There's no real rule of thumb, higher shader count and faster clock speeds are usually your best bet. But try to buy cards in newer generations, as they're more optimized each time. A HD 79XX card is the most advised 'mining' card, or some of these newer 280X / 290X GPUs are equally as good if not better. Just check the Litecoin Hardware Comparison sheet and (as a rough guide) change KH to MH when doing SHA-256 (Bitcoin) instead of Scrypt (Litecoin/Most Altcoins)
SHA-256 seems to benefit from higher core speeds whereas Scrypt benefits more from higher memory speeds.
https://litecoin.info/Mining_hardware_comparison4; The Identifiers are usually easily looked up from the Manufacturers site, or using general shopping sites;
I.e. A 11196-00-20G is a Sapphire 7950 3GB as Google reveals;
http://www.sapphiretech.com/presentation/product/?cid=1&gid=3&sgid=1157&pid=1439&psn=000101http://www.amazon.co.uk/Sapphire-11196-00-20G-HD7950-GDDR5-Graphics/dp/B0091MER16Hope this helps ^_^