Graphic Card Problem

RossTheGuy

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Jun 16, 2016
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So recently I got a new graphic card.
Aftter I placed it,I saw that there are no 6 pin cables to connect it.
So i bought one but i couldnt find a spot to connect the other end.
Here is a link to the one i bought http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=9SIA6J32TK8411&cm_re=sata_6_pin_power-_-9SIA6J32TK8411-_-Product&nm_mc=AFC-C8Junction&cm_mmc=AFC-C8Junction-Skimlinks-_-na-_-na-_-na&AID=12087162&PID=3899435&SID=skim1402X558040X11d2ba09b296d64ff8bb45b856bb0619&utm_medium=affiliates&utm_source=afc-Skimlinks

So can someone tell me where to plug the 15 pin part(i started with this 1 year ago so i am still a newbie)
 

Eximo

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More information is required indeed. What outputs the power supply has will be very important. If your PSU only offers the older 4-pin Molex connectors you will need an adapter like this:

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16812423173&cm_re=molex_to_6_pin-_-12-423-173-_-Product

What you have purchased is technically feasible, but a terrible idea. Those are very low power output wires (thus the small pins) a standard 6-pin connector has two dedicated 18 gauge wires for providing up to a rated 75W of power, average SATA hard drive peaks at 10W.

If your power supply does not have a six-pin connector, it is likely not intended for running a graphics card.
 

Bakua

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Aug 14, 2015
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From those pictures I see some USB 2.0/fan connectors, but I don't see a 6 pin. On your power-supply, do you see anything like in the picture I provided? (the 8-pin on the right side of the picture). To me it looks like an old generic PSU, may or may not support GPU connectors.
 

Bakua

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Do you see a 4-pin molex then (port)? (Refer to the Newegg link Eximo has posted). If you do not see one, you would need to upgrade that power-supply (unless you have an extra GPU that doesn't need any connectors, something like a 750Ti)
 

Bakua

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The R7 360 should say on how much VRAM it has, but if I were to guess, it would be around 1GB-2GB (most common). Your VRAM (dedicated video memory, or Virtual RAM) as of right now is probably referring to any integrated graphics you have on your CPU.