Re: Your mission
Posted by French Toast on
Tue Mar 1st 2011 at 4:53am
3043 posts
304 snarkmarks
Registered:
Jan 16th 2005
Occupation: Kicking Ass
Location: Canada
You have a $1000 CAD budget to throw a gaming PC together sans any peripherals. What do you choose?
Re: Your mission
Posted by sgtfly on
Tue Mar 1st 2011 at 12:29pm
Posted
2011-03-01 12:29pm
sgtfly
member
273 posts
347 snarkmarks
Registered:
Jan 24th 2005
Occupation: 5 more years of BS and I'm done. WOOHOO!
Location: Batavia,IL USA
Tigerdirect is probably the best way to go. If you wait for deals which they run all the time.
Of course having one 4 miles from my house helps too.
If you have any Fry's electronic stores in Canada, they can have some good deals though they have crappy customer service.
ATi is not my favorite either, driver issues seem to be constant and I've had every ATi card I ever owned crap out on me and never had 1 nvidia die.
My last build was Intel but I've owned several AMD's and have no complaints about them at all. I just wanted SLi at the time which finding an AMD board was hard to do.
Light is faster than sound:That is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.
Your riches in life are family and friends, everything else is just a distraction.
Re: Your mission
Posted by French Toast on
Tue Mar 1st 2011 at 2:15pm
3043 posts
304 snarkmarks
Registered:
Jan 16th 2005
Occupation: Kicking Ass
Location: Canada
If there's a good retailer in say, Buffalo, then I can easily make the hike to the US, I just need to find a store that has everything in stock.
Re: Your mission
Posted by French Toast on
Tue Mar 1st 2011 at 10:36pm
Posted
2011-03-01 10:36pm
3043 posts
304 snarkmarks
Registered:
Jan 16th 2005
Occupation: Kicking Ass
Location: Canada
Because the last time I built a PC or took an active interest in what's going on w/ technology like this was 9 YEARS AGO when I built one w/ my dad. I have NO IDEA what I'm doing.
Re: Your mission
Posted by Orpheus on
Tue Mar 1st 2011 at 11:05pm
Posted
2011-03-01 11:05pm
Orpheus
member
13860 posts
2024 snarkmarks
Registered:
Aug 26th 2001
Occupation: Long Haul Trucking
Location: Long Oklahoma - USA
join the club. I was totally out of the loop for 4 years bud. Anywho, look at that 6 core.
The best things in life, aren't things.
Re: Your mission
Posted by French Toast on
Tue Mar 1st 2011 at 11:15pm
Posted
2011-03-01 11:15pm
3043 posts
304 snarkmarks
Registered:
Jan 16th 2005
Occupation: Kicking Ass
Location: Canada
Oh hey, there's a newegg.ca
Sweet.
I've heard that not much is ready for a 6 core CPU and a quad-core makes more sense at the moment.
Re: Your mission
Posted by Crono on
Wed Mar 2nd 2011 at 12:48am
Posted
2011-03-02 12:48am
Crono
super admin
6628 posts
700 snarkmarks
Registered:
Dec 19th 2003
Location: Oregon, USA
I'd just like to say, comparing the 8800, even the dual card version, to the 460, is sort of a joke. I understand money savings and all that, but honestly, there's games that are requiring GF9 and equivalent series GPUs for proper operation now.
And, again, the GPU is, pretty much, the most important component for games. So, just keep that in mind. (The 8800 GTX x2, which is, basically an SLI in one card ... only gets about 35fps, max, in Crysis at around 1080P resolutions, no AA, no AF. A single 460 with the same settings will only be about 10fps lower and take nowhere near the same amount of power. And, if you SLI a 460, the resolution scaling is amazing. It's like, full 60fps at 1080P with AA and AF maxed. The 560s perform a bit better than that, like, 35/70 as opposed to 28/60)
The RAM is sort of non-negotiable, just because, it HAS to be DDR3. Also ... it's $45 which is really not that much. If he's got some DDR3 1066 or 1333 RAM, then go for it, I guess ... but if it's not, then you can't use the board I'm suggesting (or any AM3 socket board for that matter)
Also, there's no longevity in 1GB sticks ... I'd argue it's REALLY worth the $45.
a 32-bit OS can't address more than 4GB of memory, in Windows it'll only recognize 3GB of it. You need a 64-bit OS, really. And, Win XP 64 shouldn't be an option (it's just Windows Server 2003 with media enable, and no drivers)
If you need to purchase (gasp) a copy of Windows, 64-bit version of 7, single use license are about $100 USD OEM.
You can't buy hard drives with the OS already installed unless it's from a pre-built system. And honestly, are you going to find a 2 TB drive with 64MB cache that has Windows on it and a 3 year warranty? (The answer is no).
Unless your dad is thinking about jacking parts from work or something ... I have no idea.
Honestly, I think the list I suggested is pretty reasonable, especially since it's in your budget. The subtraction of the optic drive, pretty much offsets the cost of the shipping and it is possible to go lower on the power supply (Really I just chose one that would handle the system maxed out ... which this set up is not)
Anyway it's a balance of longevity, performance, and cost. While I understand budgets and saving money and all that jazz ... I don't think it's wise to undercut your own budget that you set out. A lot of people do this and it makes no sense. You end up losing out on a significantly better machine usually for not that much extra.
Blame it on Microsoft, God does.
Re: Your mission
Posted by French Toast on
Wed Mar 2nd 2011 at 1:00am
3043 posts
304 snarkmarks
Registered:
Jan 16th 2005
Occupation: Kicking Ass
Location: Canada
Alright, thanks for the response. Like I said - I'm very poorly informed about this area at the moment. It would have been nice to save some money w/ my uncles parts but I'm not going to compromise the quality of the system for it now that I know it's not worth it.
Re: Your mission
Posted by French Toast on
Wed Mar 2nd 2011 at 5:27pm
3043 posts
304 snarkmarks
Registered:
Jan 16th 2005
Occupation: Kicking Ass
Location: Canada
Alright, so using the parts list Crono put together plus a case I found for 89.99, my total cost w/ shipping (and 13% tax) is $1352.29
Methinks that's do-able, though I'm going to poke around and see if I can find some of these for less (or at least somewhere with lower shipping).
I have a 1tb external drive on my desk, so I may play with my HDD options a bit.
Thanks for the help boys.
EDIT: Any recommendations on a CPU fan?
Re: Your mission
Posted by sgtfly on
Wed Mar 2nd 2011 at 7:23pm
sgtfly
member
273 posts
347 snarkmarks
Registered:
Jan 24th 2005
Occupation: 5 more years of BS and I'm done. WOOHOO!
Location: Batavia,IL USA
you need to take the size of your case,MB and GPU into consideration when getting a cpu fan. Their are plenty of good fans out there cheaper and expensive just do your research is all I can suggest
Light is faster than sound:That is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.
Your riches in life are family and friends, everything else is just a distraction.
Re: Your mission
Posted by omegaslayer on
Wed Mar 2nd 2011 at 9:01pm
2481 posts
595 snarkmarks
Registered:
Jan 16th 2004
Occupation: Sr. DevOPS Engineer
Location: Seattle, WA
Zalman is quiet and efficient.
I have a zalman fan for my i7 920 (stock 2.6 GHz), and I over clock it to a stable 3.6GHz, and it idles at 25 degrees C (I think thats the right temp). (basically the CPU runs cooler over clocked than it would with the stock fan at normal clock).
They're big, but in-expensive, I think I got mine for 40$.
And what meme on your avatar is that Frenchy?
Re: Your mission
Posted by French Toast on
Thu Mar 3rd 2011 at 2:31am
3043 posts
304 snarkmarks
Registered:
Jan 16th 2005
Occupation: Kicking Ass
Location: Canada
Oh okay, I didn't realize that a fan came with the CPU. In that case I'm not going to bother at the moment. I'm heading out to go to some physical stores on Friday, and I'm hoping to pick up a HDD and PSU in-store to cut out shipping if possible.
Re: Your mission
Posted by Crono on
Thu Mar 3rd 2011 at 4:09am
Crono
super admin
6628 posts
700 snarkmarks
Registered:
Dec 19th 2003
Location: Oregon, USA
Things to look for:
Power Supply:
850W land (for future upgrades ... if you're OK with buying another one later, then 600W land)
~50A on the +12V rails! THIS IS VERY IMPORTANT. Your video card could fry the system without a proper current rating on the +12V line. MORE than ONE +12V rail is what you want (the one I linked has 4) The current is additive, since the GPU uses two PCI-E plugs ... you can make sure two separate rails are supplying it.
You want an Energy Efficient one. The ones I were looking at are Silver and Gold 80+ certified. This means, during average load, the efficiency of the unit is 80% or above. (Higher efficiency % is better)
You'll probably want something with modular cabling ... it just makes your life so much easier.
Warranty is also something you want to look at. Most will only have a year warranty. But better ones will have 3-5.
As for HDDs ... I'd really suggest tracking the one I linked down. The RPM is lower, but it actually averages out. (As long as you're not moving around terrabytes of data constantly, you shouldn't experience any slowness)
If you choose something else you want these things:
64MB cache or higher. Don't go lower. If data can sit in cache it won't even have to look at the disc.
3-5 Year warranty. Accept nothing lower. You'll regret it, believe me (I had a Hitachi drive, and it was the only new HDD I bought that crapped out on me. And they're normally so reliable)
So yeah. The only thing is ... at least, how it is here, is the prices are so much higher in stores that you could almost buy two of the same item and ship them both and still save money. Alright that's an exaggeration, but still they're really expensive.
Blame it on Microsoft, God does.
Re: Your mission
Posted by sgtfly on
Thu Mar 3rd 2011 at 12:42pm
Posted
2011-03-03 12:42pm
sgtfly
member
273 posts
347 snarkmarks
Registered:
Jan 24th 2005
Occupation: 5 more years of BS and I'm done. WOOHOO!
Location: Batavia,IL USA
What I actually did was take an old dual core box I had threw in a couple 1tb drives in that raided it and made a home server for all my backing up and the wifes business backups.
If you have an old machine thats the way to go
Light is faster than sound:That is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.
Your riches in life are family and friends, everything else is just a distraction.
Re: Your mission
Posted by Orpheus on
Thu Mar 3rd 2011 at 10:13pm
Posted
2011-03-03 10:13pm
Orpheus
member
13860 posts
2024 snarkmarks
Registered:
Aug 26th 2001
Occupation: Long Haul Trucking
Location: Long Oklahoma - USA
I dunno. When two parts are within 50 bucks of one another I'd have to wonder where the waste comes in. Now I admit, I am still learning the new processor types but it just makes sense to have the two other cores if the prices are so close.
My reasoning before you ask. You mentioned getting one later for 1/2 the price. That would be 100 bucks assume its 200 now. If you can get a quad for 150 or less, you'd still be paying 50 bucks more in some future time for the 6 core. (more than if you just bought it now) You'd not be saving and you'd have a 4 core just laying around.
Still, if dollars won't permit you must get what you can afford. SO THE QUAD IS A GOOD DEAL!
The best things in life, aren't things.
Re: Your mission
Posted by sgtfly on
Thu Mar 3rd 2011 at 11:36pm
Posted
2011-03-03 11:36pm
sgtfly
member
273 posts
347 snarkmarks
Registered:
Jan 24th 2005
Occupation: 5 more years of BS and I'm done. WOOHOO!
Location: Batavia,IL USA
How true in alot of this discussion, if you can get 6 cores almost as cheap, go for it...why not. Alittle extra ram is a very good idea.
My biggest thing w\comps is keeping them cool, as Crono said you don't fancy but functioal. Keep your case air flowing and your fine. I'm not a big fan of OC'ing either, thats for tech geek bragging rights, to push their comp faster than the next guy...whoopee!
If you can get some overkill for a few extra bucks go for it...saves on upgrades down the road, too many get just enough and a yr later bang it's not enough.
Things change so fast it is ridiculous but that's the tech world for ya.
Light is faster than sound:That is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.
Your riches in life are family and friends, everything else is just a distraction.
Re: Your mission
Posted by Crono on
Fri Mar 4th 2011 at 1:14am
Crono
super admin
6628 posts
700 snarkmarks
Registered:
Dec 19th 2003
Location: Oregon, USA
The problem is it isn't like $50. A nice X6 processor is more than $200 now. And if the upgrade is in like three years ... he'll be getting a better chip, likely. That's the idea anyway.
But, I only suggested the lower end one, because he's very concerned with money. I mean, maxing out the system I proposed is still sub-$1300 USD, so it's not really overpriced by any means.
Honestly, the component you'll have to be wary of finding is the GPU. I'd suggest doubling up as soon as the price goes down or the card becomes rarer. Just because, if you want SLI to work, they do need to be relatively the same. (PhysX processing will work with non-matching GPUs, though, but that's not what you want ... you want that in ADDITION to additional GPU processing) ... those cycle the fastest ... CPUs the next fastest and RAM the slowest.
You'll be able to find this RAM for the next 5-6 years, at least. No joke.
Blame it on Microsoft, God does.
Re: Your mission
Posted by Orpheus on
Fri Mar 4th 2011 at 3:22am
Orpheus
member
13860 posts
2024 snarkmarks
Registered:
Aug 26th 2001
Occupation: Long Haul Trucking
Location: Long Oklahoma - USA
I was more less just keeping the topic live and going. I was just adding up the ones and zeros and came up with my post. It just made sense to me that any 6, even a bottom rung one would be better than a 4.
No matters. It was a good read.
The best things in life, aren't things.
Re: Your mission
Posted by French Toast on
Mon Mar 14th 2011 at 1:00am
3043 posts
304 snarkmarks
Registered:
Jan 16th 2005
Occupation: Kicking Ass
Location: Canada
Sweet ass sweet. Everything is ready and installed - just waiting on my video card to arrive. Hopefully tomorrow I can turn this thing on and find out what explodes first because I installed it wrong.
Re: Your mission
Posted by Orpheus on
Mon Mar 14th 2011 at 1:40am
Orpheus
member
13860 posts
2024 snarkmarks
Registered:
Aug 26th 2001
Occupation: Long Haul Trucking
Location: Long Oklahoma - USA
LOL..
We have faith in'ya Frenchy. You'll do fine.
The best things in life, aren't things.
Re: Your mission
Posted by French Toast on
Mon Mar 14th 2011 at 11:13pm
Posted
2011-03-14 11:13pm
3043 posts
304 snarkmarks
Registered:
Jan 16th 2005
Occupation: Kicking Ass
Location: Canada
Bahahahaha, went to put the Windows Install disc in and it turns out my drive is so old it doesn't read DVDs.
Re: Your mission
Posted by French Toast on
Mon Mar 14th 2011 at 11:59pm
Posted
2011-03-14 11:59pm
3043 posts
304 snarkmarks
Registered:
Jan 16th 2005
Occupation: Kicking Ass
Location: Canada
Yeah, that seems to be true. I didn't plug anything in wrong though, the BIOS setup went fine, just going to be about 3 hours before I can grab a spare drive from my Uncle.
Re: Your mission
Posted by French Toast on
Sat Mar 19th 2011 at 5:47am
3043 posts
304 snarkmarks
Registered:
Jan 16th 2005
Occupation: Kicking Ass
Location: Canada
Well, thanks a lot Crono for all your help and guidance on this build. Crysis in 1080p "Very High" w/ 16x AA is a thing of beauty.
Re: Your mission
Posted by Crono on
Sun Mar 20th 2011 at 1:31am
Crono
super admin
6628 posts
700 snarkmarks
Registered:
Dec 19th 2003
Location: Oregon, USA
Crysis 2 MP demo looks even better (and is more efficient, go figure) You should check it out before it's no longer available.
Blame it on Microsoft, God does.