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#2861 | ||||||||
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Last edited by chibilaharl; 12-10-2012 at 12:29 AM.. |
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#2862 | ||||
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Just grab the Corsair CX750 builder series 80+ bronze for $65 AR @ newegg. Otherwise, wait around for a sale on a better quality 650w unit around the sub $50 price point. Should be easy to find once Christmas sales start hitting.
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#2864 | ||||||
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1. Can't fit an FM2 cpu into an AM3+ socket. 2. Waste of money to buy the new A-10 APU (CPU + GPU) when you budget in a dedicated graphics card. It uses a 7660 gpu, which is about the same as a 6670 card. Peanuts compared to a GTX 560 ti, but it can hold its own compared to $60-80 cards it was meant to replace. 3. Don't bother with the GTX 560 ti unless its $40+ cheaper. 4. Don't need to spend $$$ on a 750w PSU for a budget single GPU rig like this. A proper 400w would be more than enough these days. 5. You want 64 bit OS, not 32. You'd just waste 4GB of your 8GB allotment of ram if you did. 6. Get a normal mechanical HDD. SSD's shouldn't find their way into a budget rig like this unless your brother has some spare HDD or doesn't mind the idea of only having 2-3 games installed at any given point in time. For a new build, I'll assume you are starting from scratch with no parts scraping.Here's an idea to start looking around for. PCPartPicker part listWhat you get is a pretty decent quad core that has way more overclock potential than the A series FMx cores to pair with your AM3+ motherboard. You could throw in an FX chip, but honestly, they suck and the similar priced FX 4x00 cpu's are about the same price of $90 that are actually slower, produce more heat and really will give you buyer's remorse. Unless you find them for uber cheap, best stick to the tried and true x4 black edition's. I even budgeted for the CM 212+ cpu cooler so you'll have OC abilities in a budget box. Stuck the same memory sticks that you had from tiger direct; decent price of $20 even though its 1.65v modules. Nothing to worry about. Cheap is cheap and its still 8GB of ram. I replaced the SSD with a 2TB 7200 HDD. Its still plenty fast for the average user and it gives your brother loads more space to stash games and porn on... I mean family photos and work documents... While the 560 ti is a great video card, it's also a generation behind the latest and hard to place it's value with the newer kids on the block. From Nvidia, you have the cheap GTX 650 ti ($110 @ the cheapest) and the GTX 660 ($180 @ the cheapest). On AMD side, you have lots more options such as the 6870 ($120 @ cheapest) or the 7850 ($150 @ cheapest). I threw in the AMD 7850 because its $170 right now, its faster than the GTX 560 ti and it has 2GB instead of 1GB of VRAM. Its plenty fast for a budget box like this. Cases is a whole other talking point. If you care to gander, I made a huge post about 4 pages before about Budget cases from $40-130 to get a sense of what is out on the product landscape that's not completely and utter shit box. The NZXT source case are nice quality for the price and you can find them on sale constantly for $40 shipped. Not only that, but the CM HAF 912 is always around the same price point almost bi-monthly that's a super budget gaming case with lots of air flow. Pick and choose what you want. Just don't settle for a crappy case when you could have gotten a decent case for the same price. The problem is not knowing what is out there and at what price points to accurately gauge the value of any item. Power Supply? That's another huge talking point. Right now, you missed a lot of sales from a week or two ago that was meant for thanksgiving holidays. We are in limbo till Christmas sales pick up in a week or two again and sadly there's barely any PSU sales that's worth mentioning, besides the Corsair CX750 builder series for $65. You really don't need much power here, you are talking about maybe 300-330w of power at full CPU/GPU load. I picked the XFX 550w 80+ bronze since its a good brand and a great unit. I normally don't look at XFX PSU mainly because they rarely go on sale and that their MSRP is crazy high for being low wattage and the fact that you can snag better quality units for the same or cheaper price. For $46, its not too bad if you need to buy now, but you could easily get away with a Corsair CX430 v2 power supply that tends to go under $20 all the time (was $17 AR two weeks ago). If you don't plan on overclocking and/or adding in a 2nd graphics card, then you really don't need a beefy 750w power supply that you picked. If you can wait, I'd say wait for better deals. SeaSonic G series 550w gold rated psu was $55 during thanksgiving weekend. Finally, add the price of a 64 bit OS and a cheapo DVD burner and your set.
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#2865 | ||||||
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![]() This is the amount of space I have for the power connector. I don't think I have any other choice but to cut out some of the drive bay. If that's the case, what tool(s) would you recommend for the job? I have today and tomorrow off of work, so I'd like to take advantage of the time. |
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#2866 | ||||
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Probably the best idea is just to use a simple dremel with a metal cutting disk. Nice, clean knockout cut. Just use a marker to figure out how much you need to cut out. And just stating the obvious... take the motherboard out before you start cutting... :p
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#2867 | ||||||
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#2868 | |||||
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Gpu I was thinking of Radeon HD 7770 GHz Edition and cpu FX-8150 Processor Also how important is a cpu cooler? Thanks again |
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#2869 | ||||
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Would this be a decent option for a dremel?
http://www.homedepot.com/h_d1/N-25ec...1#.UMZDRHlgJm4 I'm thinking of heading over there in the morning, but I don't want to miss out if there are better options out there. Looking at the picture, I believe it comes with a metal cutting disk. Last edited by Prota; 12-10-2012 at 04:43 PM.. |
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#2870 | ||||
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For those that use an SSD as a boot drive, what size do you reccommend? Right now the hard drive and case are my last two puzzle pieces. I want to buy an ssd for the OS and then take the case off my WD 2Tb external and throw that in there for storage of music, games, pictures, etc.
I'm looking specifically at maybe this Kingston 128 at $99 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16820239374 Samsung 830 128gb at $99 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16820147188 Or the Crucial M4 256, which is $159 after promo code. http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16820148443 Leaning a bit towards the 256gb but not sure yet. |
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#2871 | ||||||||||||
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I'm going to say this as politely as possible... FCUK FX! lol Its such a terrible product and the biggest PC tech fail for the last decade. If you want to mainly game, stick with the X4 BE chips, they are still faster for gaming per clock than the best FX chips costing 2-3x more despite being a little over 3 years old. Specially when you can grab the cheap X4 955 or 965 BE and overclock them to 4.0Ghz with ease; easily beats the FX 8150 without it eating 430 watts like what the FX does when its overclocked with not much more performance. I'm going to quote myself like I've done countless times on other PC related forums:
You didn't hear this from me. Another option you could do is buy the dremel from homedepot, get a spare set of metal cutting disks then return the dremel the next day, but only use the cutting disks. Pay in cash because they'll track your order if you used a credit or debit card.
The only thing that sucks about the 840 is that it's slower than the 830 in some tests, mostly regarding with random read/write with incompressible files, but in most people's system, that's such a synthetic benchmark that you wouldn't really see it happen in real world situations, specially in home settings. Another option is to grab two 128GB sized SSD's and put them in RAID 0 (strip). Its still a bit cheaper per GB doing this and you will get a hefty performance boost, easily maxing out your SATA III bandwidth. It's a little more work to get it setup as your MBR, but it really only adds like 2 more steps now days. Specially now that you can enable TRIM command functions with RAID-0 on a 7 series Intel chipset, its a pretty viable option with no worries. |
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#2872 | ||||||
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#2873 | ||||||
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If you are sticking with 1600 speeds, just find any generic cas 9 sets. 1.5v is preferred since that's the standard voltage. Older AMD chipsets/cpu's were a little skiddish in accepting non QAL 1.6v+ DDR3 modules, but its a thing of the past in most modern chipsets and cpu support (memory controller are now on cpu). Pick whatever is the cheapest set you can find. It doesn't matter, they are all made in the same factories, different vendors. |
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#2874 | ||||
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Okay everyone, I think I'm almost there. I finally finished building my PC, but it wouldn't be any fun if everything worked the first time I powered it on. When I started up the computer, I didn't get a display. I have it connected to my TV via HDMI. I'm not sure if it won't display though HDMI until I mess with the BIOS, but I won't know until I get a VGA cable. Also, the power button started the PC, but the LED didn't light up, and when I tried to power down the computer with the same button, nothing happened. All the fans were working properly, including the graphics card's fan. I didn't hear any beeping when I booted it up. If anyone has any ideas as to what the problem may be, I'm all ears. I'll try double checking all my connections tomorrow just in case.
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#2876 | ||||
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The readout just says C, it doesn't have another number or letter next to it. The manual says C0-CF has to do with OEM BDS intialization codes, but again, not sure if that counts since C has no accompanying digit/letter. My video card is the XFX Radeon 6870 if that helps. Both the power button on the tower and on the board will power up the system, but not turn it off. The reset button does nothing as well, but clear cmos is working. I also noticed that the yellow light (for when the memory slot is functional) is on when I have the computer plugged in, but turns off when I try to power it up.
Also, was I wrong in the assumption that it I would be able to use my tv as a monitor from the start, or do I need to buy a vga cable first before being able to set it that way? For all I know, it may actually be booting and I might not be able to see a thing. However, as you mentioned before, since I didn't hear the beep that may not be the case. |
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#2877 | ||||
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Fixed the LED problem, but the rest are still present. I did some research and I believe the C code means that the CPU isn't initializing properly. I may have to double-check the CPU and make sure it's seated properly. Since I already have the Hyper 212 Plus installed, should I worry about getting to the CPU? Since the thermal pasted has dried and all, would it be difficult to force it off? I won't have time to do this today, have to head to work, but I welcome as much help as possible before I get back to dealing with the pc.
Last edited by Prota; 12-12-2012 at 04:00 PM.. |
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#2878 | ||||
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It shouldn't matter if you are using hdmi, dvi or display port; the system will recognize what monitor is hooked up automatically on boot. It could be an issue with the cpu, maybe something isn't flush or something blocking a pin or two. Open it up and see if you see any debris in there. Might even have a faulty cpu, but that's rare as hell. More than likely, you could have a bent pin on the LGA socket so I'd check that over with a magnifying glass.
As for thermal paste, it would take something around 100-200+ hours at full load to "bake" or set the thermal paste to harden/dry. It shouldn't be hard to pop it off right now, but just pull away from a corner to reduce overall stress when taking the cpu cooler off. It's not hard to "force" it off and the cpu rips out of the socket and do major damage. I've seen it happen in person, drop my mouth in amazement with the person going "is that good?"... |
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#2879 | ||||
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So I knew for the last two years I needed a new pc, I even asked for help here and almost pulled the trigger once or twice. Last night my 8 year old HD finally conked out, so I am taking that as a sign that it's time to get a new one.
Thing is I am not sure what I want. Traditionally I have spent $1,000-$1,300 and bought a rig from someplace like ecollegepc and then with upgrades stretched it 8 years. Now I am thinking both about building my own and also building something more economical. The only musts I have is that it run at least Diablo 3 and Borderlands 2. Outside that there isn't anything I am dying to run. So, am I better off buying a cheaper machine and upgrading in a few years or is it smarter to just build the power machine now. Just trying to debate my options and see what economically makes the most sense.
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When the rest of the world is crazy it just does not pay to be sane! - Captain Lerner Government is the enemy, until you need a friend - Bill Cohen Tea baggers keep saying they want their country back, well I say I want mine forward - Bill Maher Id rather be hated for what I am then loved for what I am not - The Miz |
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#2880 | ||||||
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What do you guys think of this build?
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