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12-27-2016 12:13 AM
Would it run??
Solved! Go to Solution.
Accepted Solutions
12-28-2016 10:25 AM
Thanks for the reply. Yes, you can replace the PSU with a different wattage without any issues. However, when you select the PSU, make sure that it has sufficient connectors to support the HDD, ODD and has the connector which suits the graphics card (if the graphics card requires additional power supply).
Some 2.0 PCI graphics cards are backward compatible with 1.0. However, if you install a 2.0 graphics card on a motherboard that supports 1.0, the performance of the 2.0 graphics card will be reduced to 1.0.
This means that the 2.0 graphics cards potential will be reduced to 1.0.
Hope this helped.
If the information I've provided was helpful,
Please give us some reinforcement by clicking the "Accepted Solution" and "Kudos" buttons,
That’ll help us and others see that we’ve got the answers!
Good Luck.
Chimney_83
I am an HP Employee
12-28-2016 10:25 AM
Thanks for the reply. Yes, you can replace the PSU with a different wattage without any issues. However, when you select the PSU, make sure that it has sufficient connectors to support the HDD, ODD and has the connector which suits the graphics card (if the graphics card requires additional power supply).
Some 2.0 PCI graphics cards are backward compatible with 1.0. However, if you install a 2.0 graphics card on a motherboard that supports 1.0, the performance of the 2.0 graphics card will be reduced to 1.0.
This means that the 2.0 graphics cards potential will be reduced to 1.0.
Hope this helped.
If the information I've provided was helpful,
Please give us some reinforcement by clicking the "Accepted Solution" and "Kudos" buttons,
That’ll help us and others see that we’ve got the answers!
Good Luck.
Chimney_83
I am an HP Employee
12-28-2016 11:09 AM - edited 12-28-2016 11:19 AM
To clarify your inquiry, and so all can understand, here is your initial post. As your computer is a p6703in model, with WIn 7, 64 bit, and is a "legacy" BIOS, it is not capable of using the newer UEFI BIOS graphic cards. Your question on the GT 710 is then moot, as it will not work in your computer, as it's a UEFI card.
Please mention a sampling of the games you wish to play. Or go here and answer the "Can I Run It". I do belive the i3-550 will be a bottle-neck (problem).
That model as an i3-550 processor, and is PCIE x 16 version 2.
HP Envy 8 5010 Tablet
(2) HP DV7t i7 3160QM 2.3Ghz 8GB
Printer -- HP OfficeJet Pro 8620 Legal
Custom Asus Z97D, I7-4790k, 16GB RAM, WIN10 Pro 64bit, ZOTAC GTX1080 AMP Extreme 3 fan 8GB RAM, 500GB SSD, Asus PB287 4k monitor, Rosewill Blackhawk case and 750W OCZ PSU.
12-29-2016 11:56 AM - edited 12-29-2016 12:25 PM
Because your i3-550 is a first generation (2010) chipset, I can not input the i3-550 1st Generation into the search parameters. Plugging a GPU card into an older model 2010 chip set is foolish without the test. Please login to the Can I Do It module. Let it test your chips.
HP Envy 8 5010 Tablet
(2) HP DV7t i7 3160QM 2.3Ghz 8GB
Printer -- HP OfficeJet Pro 8620 Legal
Custom Asus Z97D, I7-4790k, 16GB RAM, WIN10 Pro 64bit, ZOTAC GTX1080 AMP Extreme 3 fan 8GB RAM, 500GB SSD, Asus PB287 4k monitor, Rosewill Blackhawk case and 750W OCZ PSU.