I would look closely at cooling air flow. If you're running large GPUs 24/7, you want to make sure you have good air flow. If you "need" a 1000W PSU, you will need to exhaust a significant part of 1000W of heat...bmwman91 wrote:At least based on prices for new stuff, I think that X99 + Haswell Xeon makes sense.
Any glaring issues with using this mobo / CPU / RAM?
Haswell Xeon E5-2603 v3 (+$70)
MSI X99S (+$110)
2x4GB DDR4-2133 (+$15)
CPU cooler of some sort to handle 85W (+$60)
Total cost increase: $255
So, basically in doing this I would be able to run 3 GPUs at X16/X16/X8 (versus X8/X4/X4), and I would either buy 2 GTX 970 cards or 1 GTX 980/980Ti to start. Then down the road I could add more GPUs, up to the max of 3. Maybe I do want to stick with the 1000W PSU if I am thinking about the 980!
That case has 1 120mm fan included, set up as a rear exhaust fan. Your PSU fan will also likely be set up as an exhaust fan, but at the bottom of the case. The GPU cards will exhaust SOME heat out the back, depending on individual designs.
You will want at least 2 120mm or larger, high-flow intake fans to force air into the case - 1 in front and 1 or 2 in the side. Intake air filters and "positive pressure" (more intake airflow than exhaust flow from fans) will help avoid sucking dust in through crevices. The open top on that case may help natural circulation as well. Many fan vendors will not show airflow specs because the fans are weak in flow or noise or both. I'd invest in 2 or 3 Noctua NF-S12A fans (noctua.at) to get max flow with minimum noise.
You might also reconsider the case and find one that will take 2x140mm intake fans up front.
As long as you don't overclock the CPU, the stock heat sink should be sufficient. I have Noctua NH-D14 coolers on my CPUs, but I run CPU Folding WUs in addition to the GPU WUs. Self-contained water coolers for CPUs are now available and popular, so that would be another option.