[QUOTE="RayvinAzn"]1: Your power supply isn't going to blow cool air on your graphics card. If you install it properly in your case, it's going to suck air out of the bottom of your case, and expel it out the back. You can mount a 120mm fan on the bottom of the case in front of the power supply though, which should help out with graphics card cooling a fair bit.
2: Unless you pay very close attention to the graphics market, upgrading to SLI is usually more trouble than its worth. Too many people buy decent, high-end setups, run off and ignore computer hardware for a year, and when they come back to get their second card, they're discontinued, and prices have skyrocketed while availability is in the dirt. And there's usually a better single card on the market than what their SLI/Crossfire setup would offer for a cheaper price by the time most people get around to upgrading anyway. If you know the market, and can predict with reasonable accuracy when the best time to buy a second card for SLI is, keep on planning for it. If that sounds like too much of a hassle, don't bother with SLI.
3: A single Nvidia card will work just fine in any motherboard with the appropriate graphics slot. Dual graphics setups (those with the cards workin in tandem anyway) require a compatible chipset in order to function. For AMD, that's pretty much any non-nForce chipset with dual PCI-e slots. for Nvidia, that's nForce chipsets only.
Munkyman587
I agree for the most part, but it is still nice to have the option for SLI if you really want it. As for the cooling situation, I don't know the case very well... but if it is worth its weight at all, it should not be an issue. Buy as many case fans as it will allow, and worst case, get one of those junky coolers you can toss in an expansion slot.
The case fits 7, 120 MM fans but if the cards are so close you can't fit a screw between them (i've seen pictures) it won't matter how many fans you have because air still isn't getting between them ... Anyways thanks for the help guys i'll do a bit more research and maybe check out ATI, if i can get a 3870 for around the price of a 9600gt i might go for the ATI chipset motherboard, however the last time i checked at my local store they were 30 dollars more than a 8800 GT 512 :'(
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