The Ultimate 'Build-A-PC' Thread. Complete With Pricings & Recommendations (06/06/10)

i just won an i7 975 processor at a IntelGameOn booth. and im wondering what motherboard and memory sticks i should be getting to support this puppy.
 
Does anyone know a good cheap build for a Windows Home Server box? I'd like 6 sata ports but im not sure how much memory or processor power is needed. It will be used for Streaming Media to the network and PC backup, no video processing or whatever. Also a case and Power supply that will handle 6 drives or 5 & dvdrom, not sure if its possible to install without the dvdrom, is it?
 
Hey guys, I have a project that I would love some community and personal help on.

Personal Computer build nicknamed 'MiNuN's Monster'

Goal: High-End Super Gaming; with the latest technology available to the public.

P.C. Case: Thermaltake's Level 10
Mother Board: ASUS P6T7 WS SuperComputer Motherboard
Processor: Intel Core i7 975 Extreme Processor BX80601975
Heatsink:
R.A.M.:
Video Card:
Hard-Disk Drive:
Drives:
Power Supply:

EXTRAS
O.S.: Windows 7 Ultimate
Sound Card:

PERIPHERALS:
Keyboard:
Mouse:
Monitor:
Printer:

As you have seen, I have started by browsing through the most expensive categories on Tigerdirect.ca. I have my heart set on the Thermaltake's Level 10 (This is the only part I fully understand ha ha ha) so it will be very hard to change my mind about this to any other case (Please make it a good reason if you think I should be getting another case).

So, if people can just start filling in the blanks, that would be great.

I do not understand much about computer parts and what they do, I have very basic knowledge and I have spent the last 3 hours reading to understand the basics (I am confident in how to assemble the hardware though). If you are making any changes to any cheaper hardware, it would be great if you can explain things in layman terms to me...but if it is a slight performance drop, I would not be too happy because I want the best of the best even if it costs another $40 or so.

I am not a regular to building my own personal computer because I have only have had 3 personal computers in my life excluding some laptops, and the one I am currently using now is way back from when I was in grade school (I am 20 years of age now...oh god this P.C. use to be so good to me for gaming).

My goal is to have the best of the best gaming P.C. right now and have it last for at least 20 years, so when 20 years past it will still be decent (I might do upgrades if it calls for it, but I feel if I get the best now there will be no needs for upgrades)

Budget: $10,000.00

Because I trust the people within this community, I am going to C.A.G. first to get my final rough build before I start looking up hardcore computer building fourms to get advice.

The most expensive MoBo seems to be extended ATX ones...but they are usually for business for high volumes correct?
 
well, honestly thats silly. there is nothing you could build today that will be "decent" in 20 years. youre better off buying 5 rigs for $2000 a piece every 4 years.
besides, what exactly is, "high-end super gaming"

id run 480's or somethiing in sli. stripe some ssd's and thatd probably be it.

[quote name='MiNuN']Hey guys, I have a project that I would love some community and personal help on.

Personal Computer build nicknamed 'MiNuN's Monster'

Goal: High-End Super Gaming; with the latest technology available to the public.

P.C. Case: Thermaltake's Level 10
Mother Board: ASUS P6T7 WS SuperComputer Motherboard
Processor: Intel Core i7 975 Extreme Processor BX80601975
Heatsink:
R.A.M.:
Video Card:
Hard-Disk Drive:
Drives:
Power Supply:

EXTRAS
O.S.: Windows 7 Ultimate
Sound Card:

PERIPHERALS:
Keyboard:
Mouse:
Monitor:
Printer:

As you have seen, I have started by browsing through the most expensive categories on Tigerdirect.ca. I have my heart set on the Thermaltake's Level 10 (This is the only part I fully understand ha ha ha) so it will be very hard to change my mind about this to any other case (Please make it a good reason if you think I should be getting another case).

So, if people can just start filling in the blanks, that would be great.

I do not understand much about computer parts and what they do, I have very basic knowledge and I have spent the last 3 hours reading to understand the basics (I am confident in how to assemble the hardware though). If you are making any changes to any cheaper hardware, it would be great if you can explain things in layman terms to me...but if it is a slight performance drop, I would not be too happy because I want the best of the best even if it costs another $40 or so.

I am not a regular to building my own personal computer because I have only have had 3 personal computers in my life excluding some laptops, and the one I am currently using now is way back from when I was in grade school (I am 20 years of age now...oh god this P.C. use to be so good to me for gaming).

My goal is to have the best of the best gaming P.C. right now and have it last for at least 20 years, so when 20 years past it will still be decent (I might do upgrades if it calls for it, but I feel if I get the best now there will be no needs for upgrades)

Budget: $10,000.00

Because I trust the people within this community, I am going to C.A.G. first to get my final rough build before I start looking up hardcore computer building fourms to get advice.

The most expensive MoBo seems to be extended ATX ones...but they are usually for business for high volumes correct?[/QUOTE]
 
[quote name='MiNuN']Hey guys, I have a project that I would love some community and personal help on.

Personal Computer build nicknamed 'MiNuN's Monster'

Goal: High-End Super Gaming; with the latest technology available to the public.

P.C. Case: Thermaltake's Level 10
Mother Board: ASUS P6T7 WS SuperComputer Motherboard
Processor: Intel Core i7 975 Extreme Processor BX80601975
Heatsink:
R.A.M.:
Video Card:
Hard-Disk Drive:
Drives:
Power Supply:

EXTRAS
O.S.: Windows 7 Ultimate
Sound Card:

PERIPHERALS:
Keyboard:
Mouse:
Monitor:
Printer:

As you have seen, I have started by browsing through the most expensive categories on Tigerdirect.ca. I have my heart set on the Thermaltake's Level 10 (This is the only part I fully understand ha ha ha) so it will be very hard to change my mind about this to any other case (Please make it a good reason if you think I should be getting another case).

So, if people can just start filling in the blanks, that would be great.

The most expensive MoBo seems to be extended ATX ones...but they are usually for business for high volumes correct?

Budget: $10,000.00[/QUOTE]

Expensive mobos are just for performance and customization. Experienced users will know how to get more out of them, but usually a person can stay around the $50-100 range.

$10,000? Are you joking? You really don't need to spend that much money. As someone else said (in similar fashion), a $10,000 won't be THAT much better than a $2000 computer and that $2000 computer won't won't be THAT much better than a $1000. Right now with prices the way they are, I would say $1000 would be a good estimate for a high end computer. Not the highest end, but a high end that will last you at least 5 years (or however long a console cycle is) and longer.

That Thermaltake 10 is really unnecessary. The performance, the material, the airflow... just nothing about it is worth its price. You're better off with a full tower higher end Antec, Coolermaster, other Thermaltakes, even a Rosewill.

But here goes, highest end products with a $10,000 budget. You can use tigerdirect.ca, but I'll list all newegg links.

P.C. Case: Thermaltake's Level 10 $800
Mother Board: ASUS P6T7 WS SuperComputer Motherboard $400
Processor: Intel Core i7 975 Extreme Processor BX80601975 $1000
Heatsink: ZALMAN CNPS9900ALED 120mm 70$
R.A.M.: 2x Corsair Dominator 6gigs (2gigx3) $400
Video Card: 3x EVGA 015-P3-1482-AR GeForce GTX 480 $1600
Hard-Disk Drive: Intel X25-M Mainstream SSDSA2MH160G2R5 2.5" $425
Drives: Pioneer Black $185
Power Supply: Rosewill BRONZE series RBR1000-M 1000W $140

EXTRAS
O.S.: Windows 7 Ultimate $180
Sound Card: Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi Titanium Fatal1ty Professional $160

PERIPHERALS:
Keyboard: Logitech G19 $177
Mouse: Really preferential. Your choice, Logitech, Razer, Microsoft, whichever. ~$70
Monitor: 2x or 3x ASUS VW266H Black 25.5" $500-750
Printer: Your choice, laser or ink, color, whatever. If you're a student, use your school's printers. Not a big deal.

Estimated total cost: $6500

I would say for your level of experience, you can cut it down to 1000 for a future-proofish computer. With the above build or a 1000 dollar computer, would you see 20 years future proof? No. Well into the next console generation? Yes for both. The inevitable 3D boom... maybe. We'll see if these graphics cards and monitors can handle it, or else you'd have to upgrade.
 
[quote name='MiNuN']Hey guys, I have a project that I would love some community and personal help on.

Personal Computer build nicknamed 'MiNuN's Monster'

Goal: High-End Super Gaming; with the latest technology available to the public.

P.C. Case: Thermaltake's Level 10
Mother Board: ASUS P6T7 WS SuperComputer Motherboard
Processor: Intel Core i7 975 Extreme Processor BX80601975
Heatsink:
R.A.M.:
Video Card:
Hard-Disk Drive:
Drives:
Power Supply:

EXTRAS
O.S.: Windows 7 Ultimate
Sound Card:

PERIPHERALS:
Keyboard:
Mouse:
Monitor:
Printer:

As you have seen, I have started by browsing through the most expensive categories on Tigerdirect.ca. I have my heart set on the Thermaltake's Level 10 (This is the only part I fully understand ha ha ha) so it will be very hard to change my mind about this to any other case (Please make it a good reason if you think I should be getting another case).

So, if people can just start filling in the blanks, that would be great.

I do not understand much about computer parts and what they do, I have very basic knowledge and I have spent the last 3 hours reading to understand the basics (I am confident in how to assemble the hardware though). If you are making any changes to any cheaper hardware, it would be great if you can explain things in layman terms to me...but if it is a slight performance drop, I would not be too happy because I want the best of the best even if it costs another $40 or so.

I am not a regular to building my own personal computer because I have only have had 3 personal computers in my life excluding some laptops, and the one I am currently using now is way back from when I was in grade school (I am 20 years of age now...oh god this P.C. use to be so good to me for gaming).

My goal is to have the best of the best gaming P.C. right now and have it last for at least 20 years, so when 20 years past it will still be decent (I might do upgrades if it calls for it, but I feel if I get the best now there will be no needs for upgrades)

Budget: $10,000.00

Because I trust the people within this community, I am going to C.A.G. first to get my final rough build before I start looking up hardcore computer building fourms to get advice.

The most expensive MoBo seems to be extended ATX ones...but they are usually for business for high volumes correct?[/QUOTE]

lol stop daydreamin when u in high school son
 
Hey guys! I actually checked out some more MoBo and I am stuck between 3.

ASUS P6T7 WS SuperComputer
EVGA X58 Classified
ASUS P6X58D Premium

Excluding price, what would you choose?

I want to go with the P6T7...but EVGA has support for the new 45nm CPU, ASUS P6X has 3-way SLI and 3.0 USB, ASUS P6T7 does not seem to have a south-bridge chip (Which I assume will improve gaming some-how) like the other 2? and only goes up to 16gb of R.A.M. not 24gb like the other two, but it does have the most PCI-E ports.
 
so you cant answer my question? what is "high-end super gaming?"
all those boards support 3-way sli.
without checking for specific issues between boards id take the evga because im a fan of theirs.

[quote name='MiNuN']Hey guys! I actually checked out some more MoBo and I am stuck between 3.

ASUS P6T7 WS SuperComputer
EVGA X58 Classified
ASUS P6X58D Premium

Excluding price, what would you choose?

I want to go with the P6T7...but EVGA has support for the new 45nm CPU, ASUS P6X has 3-way SLI and 3.0 USB, ASUS P6T7 does not seem to have a south-bridge chip (Which I assume will improve gaming some-how) like the other 2? and only goes up to 16gb of R.A.M. not 24gb like the other two, but it does have the most PCI-E ports.[/QUOTE]
 
[quote name='paz9x']so you cant answer my question? what is "high-end super gaming?"
all those boards support 3-way sli.
without checking for specific issues between boards id take the evga because im a fan of theirs.[/QUOTE]

Sorry I did not think you were serious.

High-end as in 'High-end' which means expensive yet good quality, not the necessary the best, but quality is assured. Just like High-end restaurants right?

Super as in 'Super Computer', in my case, a personal Super Computer that is build with a purpose of 'Gaming' which means the reason I want this P.C. to play video games.

BTW...only the P6X has 3-way SLI...the other 2 are dual.
 
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[quote name='MiNuN']BTW...only the P6X has 3-way SLI...the other 2 are dual.[/QUOTE]

The choices you provided are all 3-way SLI ready
 
^ Ah, okay, thanks! It is weird how it is not openly stated on the other 2 than, how did you find this information?

Anyways here is an update to my rig in progress.

Personal Computer build nicknamed 'MiNuN's Monster'

Goal: High-End Super Gaming; with the latest technology avaiable to

the public.

P.C. Case: Thermaltake Level 10 VL30001N1Z Black Aluminum ATX Super

Full Tower Gaming Station Computer Case
Mother Board: ASUS P6X58D Premium Motherboard
Processor: Intel BX80613i7980X Core i7 980X Extreme Edition

Processor
Heatsink: (I actually need help choosing a heatsink)
R.A.M.: 3 X Corsair CMP8GX3M2A1600C9 Domintor Dual Channel 8192MB PC12800 DDR3 Memory or OCZ OCZ3G1333LV8GK Gold 8GB PC10666 DDR3 Dual Channel Memory Upgrade
Video Card:
Hard-Disk Drive:
Drives:
Power Supply:

EXTRAS
O.S.: Windows 7 Ultimate
Sound Card:
Wireless Card:

PERIPHERALS:
Keyboard:
Mouse:
Monitor:
Printer:

I have chosen to go with the ASUS premium over the ASUS supercomputer MoBo. I need help choosing the best heat-sink for i7 &LGA1366.

Right now I am in the crisis of going with buffered or unbuffered R.A.M.?...the unbuffered R.A.M. is 1/3 of the cost of the buffered ones...yet performs just as well if not faster, I mean I am not running a server right? is unbuffered really suitable for personal desktops guys?

@Kilm thank you for the recommended build, I will check it out after I am satisfied picking my own
 
Hey guys! I finished my rig:applause:. I am very surprised at myself, when I first posted the empty rig on this forum, I did not know anything about personal computers other than how to use one, but after one week of looking through hundreds of products, I feel very confident about computer mumbo-jumbo:booty:.

A first at C.A.G. Here is my completed final rough rig, please comment as you feel, I am very open-minded.:bouncy: (The prices will be after the rig).

Personal Computer build nicknamed 'MiNuN's Monster'

Goal: High-End Super Gaming; with the latest technology avaiable to the public.

Specifications to work with;
6 X 240-pin (All used up by R.A.M.)
3 x PCI Express 2.0 x16 (x16/x16/x1) or (x16/x8/x8) (-1 x16 used by Video Card)
1 X PCI Express X1
2 X PCI (-1 used up by Wireless Card) (-1 used up by Sound Card)
6 X SATA 3Gb/s (-1 used up by 2TB HDD)
2 X SATA 6Gb/s (All used up by 1TB HDDs)
3 X External 5.25" Drive Bays (-1 used up by DVD Drive)
6 X Interal 3.5" Drive Bays (-3 used up by HDDs)
8 X Rear Expansaion Slots (-1 used up by video card) (-1 used up by wireless card) (-1 used up by sound card)
1 X IEEE 139.4A
1 x Front eSata Port
1 x Dual DVI (-1 used up by monitor)
1 X HDMI
1 X Display Port
1 X S/PDIF OUT Optical
1 X S/PDIF OUT Coaxial
1 x Front HD Audio Ports
6 X Rear HD Audio Ports
4 X Front 2.0 USB Ports
4 X Rear 2.0 USB Ports (-1 used up by G19) (-1 used up by G35)
2 X Rear 3.0 USB Ports
2 X Keyboard 2.0 USB Ports (-1 used up by X8)
2 X PS/2
MoBo Power Pin = 24-Pin

P.C. Case: Thermaltake Level 10 VL30001N1Z Black Aluminum ATX Super Full Tower Gaming Station Computer Case
Mother Board: ASUS P6X58D Premium Motherboard
Processor: Intel BX80613i7980X Core i7 980X Extreme Edition Processor
Heatsink: Tuniq Tower 120 Extreme Universal CPU Cooler 120mm
R.A.M.: CORSAIR DOMINATOR 8GB (2 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1600 (PC3 12800) Desktop Memory Model CMP8GX3M2A1600C9, CORSAIR DOMINATOR 16GB (4 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1333 Desktop Memory Model CMP16GX3M4A1333C9
Video Card: Diamond Radeon HD 5970 Video Card $937.99
Hard-Disk Drive: 2 X Western Digital Caviar Black WD1002FAEX 1TB 7200 RPM 64MB Cache SATA 6.0Gb/s 3.5" Internal Hard Drive, Western Digital RE4 WD2003FYYS 2TB 7200 RPM 64MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb/s 3.5" Internal Hard Drive
Other Drives: Lite-On IHAS424-98 Internal DVD Writer
Power Supply: Ultra X4 1200-Watt Modular Power Supply $259.97

EXTRAS:
O.S.: Windows 7 Ultimate
Wireless Card: Sabrent 802.11n Wireless PCI Controller Card $32.97
Sound Card: Asus Xonar Essence ST PCI 7.1 Sound Card $277.99
Security Software: VIPRE Antivirus Premium $100.00

PERIPHERALS:
Keyboard: Logitech G19 Gaming Keyboard
Mouse: Microsoft 3HA-00001 SideWinder X8 Mouse
Mouse surface: RAZER Megasoma Professional Gaming Mouse Mat $49.99 & RAZER Destructor Professional Gaming Mat
Monitor: Viewsonic VX2265wm 22" Widescreen LCD Monitor $329.99
Speakers: Creative GigaWorks S750 700 Watts 7.1 Speaker $500
Headset: Logitech G35 Gaming Headphone
Printer: Brother MFC-795cw Inkjet AiO Printer Wireless $199.99

http://secure.newegg.ca/WishList/PublicWishDetail.aspx?WishListNumber=14769126

Here is my wish-list on Newegg.ca (Which shows the prices for most prices), The parts that have prices beside them on my list is not found on Newegg.ca and is taken from Tigerdirect.ca except for GigaWorks S750, which came back a quick google.

I plan to get started on this rig after some feedback, stay in touch if you want to see my progress!:D
 
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Here's a proper link to your wishlist
http://secure.newegg.ca/WishList/PublicWishDetail.aspx?WishListNumber=14769126

RAM: I don't know why you'd want to mix and match your RAM
Videocard: Make sure it can fit in your case
Hard drives: Just get SSDs for performance, unless you actually plan on having 4 TB worth of data on your computer
Other drives: Might as well get a writable blu-ray drive

security software: Just use Avast, probably better software, anyway

Everything else doesn't really matter
 
[quote name='kilm']Here's a proper link to your wishlist
http://secure.newegg.ca/WishList/PublicWishDetail.aspx?WishListNumber=14769126

RAM: I don't know why you'd want to mix and match your RAM
Videocard: Make sure it can fit in your case
Hard drives: Just get SSDs for performance, unless you actually plan on having 4 TB worth of data on your computer
Other drives: Might as well get a writable blu-ray drive

security software: Just use Avast, probably better software, anyway

Everything else doesn't really matter[/QUOTE]

@kilm

R.A.M.: I actually wanted to get the Corsair Dominator 24Gb (6x4GB) in one package but I can not find it in any stores, and the Corsair online store says it is coming soon. The reason why I am mixing is because the 16GB (4X4GB) pack comes with an air intake fan for sure, but I am not sure if the 8GB (2X4GB) comes with it, if it does, I would get 3 packs of that 8GB because the R.A.M. is just a bit faster. I know they are different models, but they are of the same type, it is okay isn't it?:hot:

Video card: Level 10 has plenty of space (Just a note guys, the PSU holder in Level 10 can not hold a Ultra X4 1600w)! but you can double check for me if you want ;)

HDD: I rather go with HDD, I mean I know it is much slower but the price of Gigabyte/$$$ is too much of a gap for me and yes I do plan on having 4TB. I already have over 1TB of anime on my externals right now ha ha ha. The HDDs are actually not that bad seeing how they can transfer GB/s, large amount in seconds.

DVD Drive: I have a PS3 for playing blu-ray, it'll just increase my cost since I do not plan to use blu-ray on my PC or even burn blu-rays.

Security: I actually planned to go with Kaspersky, but I followed this website http://www.pcantivirusreviews.com/, it seems like they do a lot of intense and in-depth testing so I am going to trust them, matter of fact I am running a 30-days trial of Vipre right now and I like it, I don't like it better than Kaspersky but hey if it performs better right? (Not to mention cheaper) and another plus about this is that it takes up VERY little space compared to the other anti-virus programs, so I don't have a heavy program running all the time especially when I want to play games.

kilm, thank you for your comments, it means a lot, I hope you can follow my blogs when I start building this rig. You guys can use this RIG as a demo under some topic like "Crazy Mofo" ha ha ha.
 
[quote name='MiNuN']@kilm
HDD: I rather go with HDD, I mean I know it is much slower but the price of Gigabyte/$$$ is too much of a gap for me and yes I do plan on having 4TB. I already have over 1TB of anime on my externals right now ha ha ha. The HDDs are actually not that bad seeing how they can transfer GB/s, large amount in seconds.[/QUOTE]

For the RAM, I'd still suggest you try to use the same memory with the same speeds, timing, bandwidth. This is just to make sure you're not bottle necked and to avoid compatibility issues. Definitely try to utilize the triple channel memory.

You still definitely want to get SSDs for performance. From 4 gigs of RAM to 16 gigs or even from an i7 860 to i7 extreme, the single greatest boost of performance you will get is going from disk-based drives to an SSD. Even with the SATA2 ports, the performance of a 7200RPM drive isn't going to match up well against an SSD. The case has plenty of drive bays, anyway, so you definitely have room for it. Curb the digital hoarding and cut back on an HD or 2 if you're worried about funds, or even the RAM. You won't need 16 gigs or however much for gaming.
 
WTF is wrong with you, MiNuN?

You're building this ridiculously expensive performance machine, throwing down $1000 on the processor alone, spend almost as much on the case(something that isn't even going to affect performance at all), another $1200 on the RAM and you don't want to spend the money on a SSD because the cost per GB is too high?! I can understand needing the hard drives for storage, you don't need the speed of an SSD for videos/pictures, but at least get a good sized SSD for a boot/application drive. I just can't imagine anyone being serious about building such a high end rig now and not including one.

Lacking Blu-ray I can at least sort of understand, even if the cost to include it is relatively small compared to everything else.
 
Right, I totally agree with you kilm, I will switch to 3 packs of the 8GB (2x4GB), I just hope it comes with the air in-take fan like the other models of the same type.

I will definitely get an SSD or 2 sometime in the future, I am just waiting for the price to drop. I do realize how it matches up against HDD, especially booting up games, but I am fine with HDDs for now. I still have 3 drive bays available for SSDs, so it will get filled up as time passes by (Actually I have not reached the 10K mark, so I am spending a lot of time thinking about this, I do want my O.S. to boot up as fast as it can go).

Yeah, I was thinking about cutting back to save some funds, I know that I won't need ALL that but I just like to fill it up.

Once again, thank you for your comments kilm.

[quote name='kilm']For the RAM, I'd still suggest you try to use the same memory with the same speeds, timing, bandwidth. This is just to make sure you're not bottle necked and to avoid compatibility issues. Definitely try to utilize the triple channel memory.

You still definitely want to get SSDs for performance. From 4 gigs of RAM to 16 gigs or even from an i7 860 to i7 extreme, the single greatest boost of performance you will get is going from disk-based drives to an SSD. Even with the SATA2 ports, the performance of a 7200RPM drive isn't going to match up well against an SSD. The case has plenty of drive bays, anyway, so you definitely have room for it. Curb the digital hoarding and cut back on an HD or 2 if you're worried about funds, or even the RAM. You won't need 16 gigs or however much for gaming.[/QUOTE]

Ha ha ha, I am seriously considering an SSD so I will let you guys know what I think after some thought. What can I say, I am in love with that case. Please follow my blog once I start building to see it happen :). I have a PS3 to play blu-ray.

[quote name='Mid Boss']WTF is wrong with you, MiNuN?

You're building this ridiculously expensive performance machine, throwing down $1000 on the processor alone, spend almost as much on the case(something that isn't even going to affect performance at all), another $1200 on the RAM and you don't want to spend the money on a SSD because the cost per GB is too high?! I can understand needing the hard drives for storage, you don't need the speed of an SSD for videos/pictures, but at least get a good sized SSD for a boot/application drive. I just can't imagine anyone being serious about building such a high end rig now and not including one.

Lacking Blu-ray I can at least sort of understand, even if the cost to include it is relatively small compared to everything else.[/QUOTE]
 
Hey guys, question, is it possible to completely 100% copy everything from an HDD to a SSD if I wanted to go for that big switch change in my life?
 
[quote name='MiNuN']Hey guys, question, is it possible to completely 100% copy everything from an HDD to a SSD if I wanted to go for that big switch change in my life?[/QUOTE]

yeah. clone it.
 
Alright, I have made some adjustment to my Rig.

I have taken out the 16GB (4x4GB) DDR3 R.A.M. pack and added 2 more of the 8GB(2x4GB) R.A.M. pack, same as my solo pack I already have on the Rig.

Thanks to kilm and Mid Boss originally bringing up the fact that is SSD to me, I have taken out the 2 1TB Caviar Black HDD for an Intel 80GB SSD.

Here is my final rough Rig version 2. All the prices are from Newegg.ca, those that are not from Newegg.ca I have hyperlinked the product to the link I got the price from.

http://secure.newegg.ca/WishList/PublicWishDetail.aspx?WishListNumber=14769126

Personal Computer build nicknamed 'MiNuN's Monster'

Goal: High-End Super Gaming; with the latest technology available to the public.

Specifications to work with;
6 X 240-pin (All used up by R.A.M.)
3 x PCI Express 2.0 x16 (x16/x16/x1) or (x16/x8/x8) (-1 x16 used up by Video Card)
1 X PCI Express X1
2 X PCI (-1 used up by Wireless Card) (-1 used up by Sound Card)
6 X SATA 3Gb/s (-1 used up by 2TB HDD) (-1 used up by SSD)
2 X SATA 6Gb/s
3 X External 5.25" Drive Bays (-1 used up by DVD Drive)
6 X Interal 3.5" Drive Bays (-2 used up by 2TB HDD & SSD)
8 X Rear Expansaion Slots (-1 used up by Video Card) (-1 used up by Wireless Card) (-1 used up by Sound Card)
1 X IEEE 139.4A
1 x Front eSata Port
1 x Dual DVI (-1 used up by Monitor)
1 X HDMI
1 X Display Port
1 X S/PDIF OUT Optical
1 X S/PDIF OUT Coaxial
1 x Front HD Audio Ports
6 X Rear HD Audio Ports
4 X Front 2.0 USB Ports
4 X Rear 2.0 USB Ports (-1 used up by G19)
2 X Rear 3.0 USB Ports
2 X Keyboard 2.0 USB Ports (-1 used up by X8) (-1 used up by G35)
2 X PS/2
MoBo Power Pin = 24-Pin


Newegg = $4,854.85, TD = $2038.90, Random = $649.99.
Total = $7,543.74 + taxes = $8524.43, Left over = $1,475.57.


P.C. Case: Thermaltake Level 10 VL30001N1Z Black Aluminum ATX Super Full Tower Gaming Station Computer Case $831.99
Mother Board: ASUS P6X58D Premium Motherboard $304.99
Processor: Intel BX80613i7980X Core i7 980X Extreme Edition Processor $1,069.99
Heatsink: Tuniq Tower 120 Extreme Universal CPU Cooler 120mm $64.99
R.A.M.: 3 X CORSAIR DOMINATOR 8GB (2 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1600 (PC3 12800) Desktop Memory Model CMP8GX3M2A1600C9 $1,217.97
Video Card: Diamond Radeon HD 5970 Video Card $937.99 (TD)
Hard-Disk Drive/Solid-State Drive: Intel X25-M Mainstream SSDSA2MH080G2R5 2.5" 80GB SATA II MLC Internal Solid State Drive (SSD) $214.99, Western Digital RE4 WD2003FYYS 2TB 7200 RPM 64MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb/s 3.5" Internal Hard Drive $309.99
Other Drives: Lite-On IHAS424-98 Internal DVD Writer $34.99
Power Supply: Ultra X4 1200-Watt Modular Power Supply $259.97 (TD)

EXTRAS:
O.S.: Windows 7 Ultimate $316.99
Wireless Card: Sabrent 802.11n Wireless PCI Controller Card $32.97 (TD)
Sound Card: Asus Xonar Essence ST PCI 7.1 Sound Card $277.99 (TD)
Security Software: VIPRE Antivirus Premium $100.00 (Sunbelt)

PERIPHERALS:
Keyboard: Logitech G19 Gaming Keyboard $218.99
Mouse: Microsoft 3HA-00001 SideWinder X8 Mouse $84.99
Mouse surface: RAZER Megasoma Professional Gaming Mouse Mat $49.99 (CC) & RAZER Destructor Professional Gaming Mat $47.99
Monitor: Viewsonic VX2265wm 22" Widescreen LCD Monitor $329.99 (TD)
Speakers: Creative GigaWorks S750 700 Watts 7.1 Speaker $500 (Online)
Headset: Logitech G35 Gaming Headphone $135.99
Printer: Brother MFC-795cw Inkjet AiO Printer Wireless $199.99 (TD)
 
Alright, I have made some adjustment to my Rig.

I have taken out the 16GB (4x4GB) DDR3 R.A.M. pack and added 2 more of the 8GB(2x4GB) R.A.M. pack, same as my solo pack I already have on the Rig.

Thanks to kilm and Mid Boss originally bringing up the fact that is SSD to me, I have taken out the 2 1TB Caviar Black HDD for an Intel 80GB SSD.

Here is my final rough Rig version 2. All the prices are from Newegg.ca, those that are not from Newegg.ca I have hyperlinked the product to the link I got the price from.

http://secure.newegg.ca/WishList/PublicWishDetail.aspx?WishListNumber=14769126

Personal Computer build nicknamed 'MiNuN's Monster'

Goal: High-End Super Gaming; with the latest technology available to the public.

Specifications to work with;
6 X 240-pin (All used up by R.A.M.)
3 x PCI Express 2.0 x16 (x16/x16/x1) or (x16/x8/x8) (-1 x16 used up by Video Card)
1 X PCI Express X1
2 X PCI (-1 used up by Wireless Card) (-1 used up by Sound Card)
6 X SATA 3Gb/s (-1 used up by 2TB HDD) (-1 used up by SSD)
2 X SATA 6Gb/s
3 X External 5.25" Drive Bays (-1 used up by DVD Drive)
6 X Interal 3.5" Drive Bays (-2 used up by 2TB HDD & SSD)
8 X Rear Expansaion Slots (-1 used up by Video Card) (-1 used up by Wireless Card) (-1 used up by Sound Card)
1 X IEEE 139.4A
1 x Front eSata Port
1 x Dual DVI (-1 used up by Monitor)
1 X HDMI
1 X Display Port
1 X S/PDIF OUT Optical
1 X S/PDIF OUT Coaxial
1 x Front HD Audio Ports
6 X Rear HD Audio Ports
4 X Front 2.0 USB Ports
4 X Rear 2.0 USB Ports (-1 used up by G19)
2 X Rear 3.0 USB Ports
2 X Keyboard 2.0 USB Ports (-1 used up by X8) (-1 used up by G35)
2 X PS/2
MoBo Power Pin = 24-Pin


Newegg = $4,854.85, TD = $2038.90, Random = $649.99.
Total = $7,543.74 + taxes = $8524.43, Left over = $1,475.57.


P.C. Case: ThermaltakeLevel 10 VL30001N1Z BlackAluminumATXSuperFullTower Gaming Station Computer Case $831.99
Mother Board: ASUS P6X58D Premium Motherboard $304.99
Processor: Intel BX80613i7980X Core i7 980X Extreme Edition Processor $1,069.99
Heatsink: Tuniq Tower 120 Extreme Universal CPU Cooler 120mm $64.99
R.A.M.: 3 XCORSAIR DOMINATOR 8GB (2 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1600 (PC3 12800) Desktop Memory Model CMP8GX3M2A1600C9 $1,217.97
Video Card: Diamond Radeon HD 5970 Video Card $937.99 (TD)
Hard-Disk Drive/Solid-State Drive: Intel X25-M Mainstream SSDSA2MH080G2R5 2.5" 80GB SATA II MLC Internal Solid State Drive (SSD) $214.99, Western Digital RE4 WD2003FYYS 2TB 7200 RPM 64MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb/s 3.5" Internal Hard Drive $309.99
Other Drives: Lite-On IHAS424-98 Internal DVD Writer $34.99
Power Supply: Ultra X4 1200-Watt Modular Power Supply $259.97 (TD)

EXTRAS:
O.S.: Windows 7 Ultimate $316.99
Wireless Card: Sabrent 802.11n Wireless PCI Controller Card $32.97 (TD)
Sound Card: Asus Xonar Essence ST PCI 7.1 Sound Card $277.99 (TD)
Security Software: VIPRE Antivirus Premium $100.00 (Sunbelt)

PERIPHERALS:
Keyboard: Logitech G19 Gaming Keyboard $218.99
Mouse: Microsoft 3HA-00001 SideWinder X8 Mouse $84.99
Mouse surface: RAZER Megasoma Professional Gaming Mouse Mat $49.99 (CC) & RAZER Destructor Professional Gaming Mat $47.99
Monitor: Viewsonic VX2265wm 22" Widescreen LCD Monitor $329.99 (TD)
Speakers: Creative GigaWorks S750 700 Watts 7.1 Speaker $500 (Online)
Headset: Logitech G35 Gaming Headphone $135.99
Printer: Brother MFC-795cw Inkjet AiO Printer Wireless $199.99 (TD)
 
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some unusual choices.

youre spending $1200 on ram you wont see a benefit from instead of doubling up the gpus
you should be running a 160gb ssd maybe 2 of them striped.
it just doesnt look like youre efficiently spending your budget.
 
[quote name='paz9x']some unusual choices.

youre spending $1200 on ram you wont see a benefit from instead of doubling up the gpus
you should be running a 160gb ssd maybe 2 of them striped.
it just doesnt look like youre efficiently spending your budget.[/QUOTE]

I will make use of CrossFireX as time pass (I want to max out my R.A.M. first) and I am able to afford more GPUs, having one powerful GPU is better than lower-performing GPUs together.

I only need SSD to boot-up software, things like videos, pictures, music etc...can be stored in a HDD.
 
[quote name='MiNuN']I will make use of CrossFireX as time pass (I want to max out my R.A.M. first) and I am able to afford more GPUs, having one powerful GPU is better than lower-performing GPUs together.

I only need SSD to boot-up software, things like videos, pictures, music etc...can be stored in a HDD.[/QUOTE]

well. a 5970 isnt one gpu. its 2 5870's at 5850 clocks. you want high end super gaming but youre using a portion of your budget on ram that will have no performance bearing on games instead of upgrading key components that will have substantial impact.

what will you be doing that will utilize that ram?

games are software too, if youre primary purpose is playing games id imagine youd address the components that improves that task.
 
Seriously, why is anybody helping MiNuN? Unless he is some type of trust fund/inheritance kid, there is no way he is actually going to spend 8.5 grand on a computer parts. Especially when he already said such crazy shit such as

[quote name='MiNuN']I do not understand much about computer parts and what they do, I have very basic knowledge and I have spent the last 3 hours reading to understand the basics (I am confident in how to assemble the hardware though). [/QUOTE]

[quote name='MiNuN']My goal is to have the best of the best gaming P.C. right now and have it last for at least 20 years, so when 20 years past it will still be decent (I might do upgrades if it calls for it, but I feel if I get the best now there will be no needs for upgrades)[/QUOTE]

So...he doesn't know how to assemble it when he gets the parts, spent a grand total of 3 hours researching what he would have to get and has no realistic idea on how long it would last or what he would need to do to upgrade it.

Everything about this screams teenager pipedream.
 
[quote name='Lawyers Guns N Money']Why spend that much money on a soundcard and the Logitech G35 if they won't take advantage of it?[/QUOTE]

I am buying the Sound Card for the P.C. Speakers.

[quote name='paz9x']well. a 5970 isnt one gpu. its 2 5870's at 5850 clocks. you want high end super gaming but youre using a portion of your budget on ram that will have no performance bearing on games instead of upgrading key components that will have substantial impact.

what will you be doing that will utilize that ram?

games are software too, if youre primary purpose is playing games id imagine youd address the components that improves that task.[/QUOTE]

I do not understand that the Radeon 5970 is 2 GPUs, is it 2 5870s slapped together?

Yes, I want High-End Super Gaming, I am considering on adjusting my Rig some more because I calculated that I only need 6GB of R.A.M. to run my build, so the smartest thing to do would be 8GB of R.A.M. but I do want to go 16GB to be safe rather than 12GB. If add another Diamond Radeon 5970, how R.A.M. would be needed to run one Diamon Radeon 5970?

I did calculated and included games for booting when I decided on the 80GB SSD.

paz9x, this is exactly why I am posting my Rig and not out buying right now, so I can get important feedback, you are added to the list of people I have to thank for helping me.


@Sporadic, Oh geez, ha ha ha, would you stop being a hater and mind your own bees-wax.

You do realize that means I spent 3 hours before THAT (which was my first about the Rig) post, yes I will admit, everything I know now is from a week's worth of reading and writing of what seems like essays.

This is a help forum, whatever people like me or not, that is the point of this thread, helping.

You also know that Humans can learn a lot in a small amount of time as well, mhmm?

I am still learning as I gather feedback for my Rig.

I worked very hard for the money, not only that, I have excellent money-managing skills. I buy whatever makes ME happy, because you know what, I am not money-crazy I do whatever that makes ME happy. Even with that said, among everybody around me, I am a over-thinking, I think long-term so I am not impulsive at all.

and Yes, I damn well deserve this, you don't know me.

oh, you know what, I might need a hater, it helps me see the whole picture.:roll:
 
[quote name='MiNuN']@Sporadic, Oh geez, ha ha ha, would you stop being a hater and mind your own bees-wax.

You do realize that means I spent 3 hours before THAT (which was my first about the Rig) post, yes I will admit, everything I know now is from a week's worth of reading and writing of what seems like essays.

This is a help forum, whatever people like me or not, that is the point of this thread, helping.

You also know that Humans can learn a lot in a small amount of time as well, mhmm?

I am still learning as I gather feedback for my Rig.

I worked very hard for the money, not only that, I have excellent money-managing skills. I buy whatever makes ME happy, because you know what, I am not money-crazy I do whatever that makes ME happy. Even with that said, among everybody around me, I am a over-thinking, I think long-term so I am not impulsive at all.

and Yes, I damn well deserve this, you don't know me.

oh, you know what, I might need a hater, it helps me see the whole picture.:roll:[/QUOTE]

hater...right

1) You don't know what you are doing and have unrealistic expectations of what you can get for your money. Spending the most amount of money you can right out of the gate of building a computer is hands down the stupidest thing you could do.
2) If you spent more than a week researching, you would have known that.
3) People that aren't impulsive and have excellent money-managing skills don't usually rush head-first into a situation where they are spending thousands of dollars on something they don't really understand and spent a week researching.
4) Yes, this is a help forum but usually people help other people with actual questions not spending two pages going "look at me and my CRAZY setup rofl - wait why don't I want 16GB of RAM? nah i'm going to get it anyways"

protip: spend 2 grand to get whatever "'MiNuN's Monster" you want from some place like ibuypower that will put it together for you and put the other 8 grand in the bank...or go ahead and blow all 10 grand on one setup (but post pictures when you do). i need a good laugh and you'll be kicking yourself in two years time.

ps [quote name='MiNuN']If add another Diamond Radeon 5970, how R.A.M. would be needed to run one Diamon Radeon 5970?[/QUOTE]

:rofl:
 
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I do realize the Video Card I have chosen comes with it's own R.A.M. but I just wanted to know if it actually requires more or use more than its own.

1. Yup
2. Disagreed
3. Hey, look at me.
4. I had the mind thought that more R.A.M. was better, but, because people have been giving me feedback, I have been learning and adjusting.

Whatever floats your boat.

protip: I do not like your protip.
 
[quote name='MiNuN']I do not understand that the Radeon 5970 is 2 GPUs, is it 2 5870s slapped together?[/QUOTE]

If you look at the card itself, you'll see there are actually 2 separate chips on one card, that's what he means.

There's a few reasons why Sporadic seems to care so much about this.

1. You could be lying about your budget and about your plans to build a computer so he calls you a high school pipe dreamer and that pisses him off.
2. If it was all true and yet if this computer never materializes, then you wasted all our time reading your posts and responding to it and that pisses him off.
3. He really cares about what you do with your money. If you're doing something with your money that he wouldn't do, that pisses him off.
4. If you don't have the technical knowledge and you're still going to invest your own time and your own money into something like building a computer, that pisses him off.
 
[quote name='kilm']If you look at the card itself, you'll see there are actually 2 separate chips on one card, that's what he means.

There's a few reasons why Sporadic seems to care so much about this.

1. You could be lying about your budget and about your plans to build a computer so he calls you a high school pipe dreamer and that pisses him off.
2. If it was all true and yet if this computer never materializes, then you wasted all our time reading your posts and responding to it and that pisses him off.
3. He really cares about what you do with your money. If you're doing something with your money that he wouldn't do, that pisses him off.
4. If you don't have the technical knowledge and you're still going to invest your own time and your own money into something like building a computer, that pisses him off.[/QUOTE]

I don't care as much as you think, my posting/writing style just comes off as really aggressive.

1-2 are right, 3 should be

3) He thinks you are an idiot since you say you know what you are doing but are asking questions like "If add another Diamond Radeon 5970, how R.A.M. would be needed to run one Diamon Radeon 5970?" which clearly prove that you don't have any idea what you are doing beyond a vague comprehension of terms. It is such a bad question, I can't even come up with a proper analogy for it.

while 4 should be

4) You are planning to spend $7 thousand+ on parts and have no experience building computers. I hope you can pick up that skill quicker than you can basic computer knowledge.

And also again

[quote name='MiNuN']My goal is to have the best of the best gaming P.C. right now and have it last for at least 20 years, so when 20 years past it will still be decent (I might do upgrades if it calls for it, but I feel if I get the best now there will be no needs for upgrades)[/QUOTE]

that alone is wow.

----------

For MiNuN, I suggest you read this multiple times

Q: What's the best way to future-proof my system/make it run top end games for 5 years?

A: YOU CANNOT FUTURE-PROOF, don't even bother trying. Buy parts with the best price-to-performance value for your money now, and save the rest. Anything you buy today will be outclassed by what's available in 2-3 years, regardless of if you spent $1000 or $4000. As a general rule, if you're spending more than $1000 you're probably wasting money somewhere.

For example, if someone tried to future-proof a gaming system three years ago, they would have gotten an Athlon X2 4200, a 7950 GX2, and paid ~$3000 for all of it. Today, it would creamed by the OP's $1000 "sweet spot" system. Someone who bought midrange back then ($1000) and upgraded again to midrange two years later ($800) would have spent less money and probably would have a C2D E6750 and 8800GT; substantially faster parts that are still usable. This trend has held true throughout 15+ years of PC hardware technology.
 
If you're going to spend that much money on everything else, don't put a cheap ass power supply in it. If you're spending money, use a quality PSU from someone like Corsair or PC Power & Cooling.
 
If any of you have weak stomachs I suggest you don't read this post.

My computer for the last 6 years is a Dell made in 2002 which I got rent-to-own for $700. Prepare thy self for the stats:

20GB HDD
300MB RAM (which I upgraded from 126MB)
Driver graphics and sound, no cards.

I've delt with this machine for most of my computting life, it's always been bad but now it's getting near impossible to be on. 3 minutes to launch Firefox! This thing has been repaired over 5 times in the past 6 years too.

I need this chain cut from my leg.

Salvaging what I can from it, what am I looking at to build a new one? Speed, performance, graphics, lots of space and a good cooling system (Tennessee weather is hot) is what I need.
 
[quote name='Sporadic']I don't care as much as you think, my posting/writing style just comes off as really aggressive.[/QUOTE]

Don't lie. Besides, your clarification of my 3 and 4 doesn't really change what I said, lol. Pretty pointless.

The way he's spending his own money (if it's true) is something you would never do if you had the budget and that really pisses you off.

He doesn't have the technical knowledge and he's still thinking about building a computer that would cost a lot of money and that pisses you off.

We've already told him about not being able to future proof a computer multiple times and it's clear it doesn't really matter to him. Let it go, bro.

Salvaging what I can from it, what am I looking at to build a new one? Speed, performance, graphics, lots of space and a good cooling system (Tennessee weather is hot) is what I need.

Nothing is salvageable except maybe a case fan? Monitor? Speakers? KB/M? Otherwise, scrap whole thing and please recycle.

Are you looking for a build with specific items? Or just general knowledge of the components you need?

Barebones, what you need is a
Power supply
Motherboard
Processor
Ram
Hard Drive
Video Card
KB/M
(Optical drive to install an OS)
Monitor
 
Was looking more at a price quote, there's a nice computer for $350 at my local Office Max, can I do better than that on my own?
 
[quote name='Buuhan1']Was looking more at a price quote, there's a nice computer for $350 at my local Office Max, can I do better than that on my own?[/QUOTE]

Hard to say without more information. What are the specs on this $350 machine? It's going to be tricky hitting that price building one, especially once you factor in the cost of Windows.
 
So I've been looking at rebuilding an older PC I have (there's a thread about it in here), and I got a wishlist going on of what I need( or at least what I think I need). The only thing I know I'm missing is a video card, and that was because I'm not really sure what to get. Let me know what you think of what I have, and a recommendation of a video card would be great!

http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817339001
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813131603
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819103681
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820144266

 
Link didn't work. What was it? I was also wondering, would this setup run WoW on ultra with max frames? Would I be ok to knock the RAM down to 2gb and still be ok?

Ok, so I posted in my thread about what I was thinking about doing, go ahead an look there, or I'll just copy the links here.
"What I selected seems good to me, as far as I can tell, it gets me the graphics power that I want, and I would also get a respectable processor. The cost on it was OK, I would like to see it at around 300 though.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16814130339
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16820148194
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16827140041
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16811233061
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16813131603
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16817339001
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16819103681
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16822145299

Let me know what you think of this. With that MOBO, I should be able to reuse the Wi Fi card, and I might throw the old HDD in just for some extra space. If you have any recommendations on ways to cheapen this up without losing the power, I would greatly appreciate it.

After doing some stripping (not like that :p) I found that I should be able to re use the case, It looks the same as the stuff sold now on the inside, so that's a plus. The two optical drives in it are a TDK 440N and Samsung SC-152. I would like to reuse these if possible, just for the sake of saving SOME money. The Wi Fi card I have now is a D-Link Air Plus, it says DWL-520+, and I'm hoping to use this as well."

I was thinking about the graphics card I linked, or the one Paz posted, not sure though, which would you guys recommend?
 
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[quote name='Fatso2027']Link didn't work. What was it? I was also wondering, would this setup run WoW on ultra with max frames? Would I be ok to knock the RAM down to 2gb and still be ok?[/QUOTE]

i think 4gb is pretty much required.

the link is for a 5750. your budget will decide which video card you get.
 
[quote name='Fatso2027']Well the one you posted and the 9800gt are the same price, just not sure which is better, I don't know Ati cards that well[/QUOTE]

sorry about that, I didnt see your link when I posted that.

Personally I think direct x11 is worth it.
It really depends on what you want and what youre willing to spend.
I know ive seen 4850's for some good deals in the last month or 2
 
Right now I have an ATI Raedon 4530 mobility HD, and it just doesn't have the omph to run WoW at full settings. I also want something that is going to be able to run newer shooters like MW2 and Crysis on high or at least close.

The only reason I like nVidia cards is because I learned their way of naming( I understand which cards are higher end). Otherwise I have no real preference.
Is the mobo/cpu I linked earlier sufficient for gaming?
 
[quote name='kilm']If you look at the card itself, you'll see there are actually 2 separate chips on one card, that's what he means.

There's a few reasons why Sporadic seems to care so much about this.

1. You could be lying about your budget and about your plans to build a computer so he calls you a high school pipe dreamer and that pisses him off.
2. If it was all true and yet if this computer never materializes, then you wasted all our time reading your posts and responding to it and that pisses him off.
3. He really cares about what you do with your money. If you're doing something with your money that he wouldn't do, that pisses him off.
4. If you don't have the technical knowledge and you're still going to invest your own time and your own money into something like building a computer, that pisses him off.[/QUOTE]

Please kilm, do not try to put Sporadic in any light of kindness, he absolutely hates want I am doing right now :bouncy:.

1. I am not one to lie.
2. It will happen.
3. LOL, I wished he cared.
4. I am very confident! :)


[quote name='Sporadic']I don't care as much as you think, my posting/writing style just comes off as really aggressive.

1-2 are right, 3 should be

3) He thinks you are an idiot since you say you know what you are doing but are asking questions like "If add another Diamond Radeon 5970, how R.A.M. would be needed to run one Diamon Radeon 5970?" which clearly prove that you don't have any idea what you are doing beyond a vague comprehension of terms. It is such a bad question, I can't even come up with a proper analogy for it.

while 4 should be

4) You are planning to spend $7 thousand+ on parts and have no experience building computers. I hope you can pick up that skill quicker than you can basic computer knowledge.

And also again



that alone is wow.

----------

For MiNuN, I suggest you read this multiple times[/QUOTE]

Hey, if asking stupid questions is what needed to confirm things I am not 100% on, than so be it. Haven't you learn it is better to ask stupid questions than not to ask at all before you start doing shit?:roll:

I will make sure this will last 20 years, but I ain't going to rub it in your face:bouncy:.

I am looking for the best gaming performance, not future-proof, the products I pick just so happen to belong in the current future-proof area right now. This is how I see it, I want the best right now and if I am happy with it once i start using it, I do not see why I would not be happy in later years.

P.S. I will not regret this, in fact, I do not regret a lot of things I do, I have learned to do things without regretting so I can remain happy.


[quote name='Lawyers Guns N Money']If you're going to spend that much money on everything else, don't put a cheap ass power supply in it. If you're spending money, use a quality PSU from someone like Corsair or PC Power & Cooling.[/QUOTE]

Yup, agreed. I see nothing wrong with Ultra X4 series.
 
Update!

I have taken out some more Corsair Dominator R.A.M., reducing the total from 24GB to 8GB.

I think I have basically perfected my Rig and I am more focus on reducing the cost of the products as much as possible (I went from $8.5K before taxes to $7.1K after taxes by scouting different sites!). I have compared prices between Newegg.ca, Tiger Direct, NCIX and Bewawa.

I do not planned on using the rest of the money to get a second GPU...I also wish to invest my money as well, so I am hoping to use the left-over please some savings to start my investment.

If you know any other Canadian Computer sites that are known to sell the products cheaper, please let me know!

Here is MiNuN's Monster Rig Version 3.:bouncy:

Personal Computer build nicknamed 'MiNuN's Monster'

Goal: High-End Super Gaming; with the latest technology available to the public.

Specifications to work with;
6 X 240-pin (-2 used up by R.A.M.)
3 x PCI Express 2.0 x16 (x16/x16/x1) or (x16/x8/x8) (-1 x16 used up by Video Card)
1 X PCI Express X1
2 X PCI (-1 used up by Wireless Card) (-1 used up by Sound Card)
6 X SATA 3Gb/s (-1 used up by 2TB HDD) (-1 used up by SSD)
2 X SATA 6Gb/s
3 X External 5.25" Drive Bays (-1 used up by DVD Drive)
6 X Interal 3.5" Drive Bays (-2 used up by 2TB HDD & SSD)
8 X Rear Expansion Slots (-1 used up by Video Card) (-1 used up by Wireless Card) (-1 used up by Sound Card)
1 X IEEE 139.4A
1 x Front eSata Port
2 x DVI (-1 used up by Monitor)
1 X HDMI
1 X Display Port
1 X S/PDIF OUT Optical
1 X S/PDIF OUT Coaxial
1 x Front HD Audio Ports
6 X Rear HD Audio Ports
4 X Front 2.0 USB Ports
4 X Rear 2.0 USB Ports (-1 used up by G19)
2 X Rear 3.0 USB Ports
2 X Keyboard 2.0 USB Ports (-1 used up by X8) (-1 used up by G35)
2 X PS/2
MoBo Power Pin = 24-Pin


Newegg.ca = $2,444.65, Tiger Direct = $742.82, NCIX = $3,057.50, Bewawa = $672.32, Others = $171.49. Total = $7,088.78, Left over = $2,911.22.


P.C. Case: Thermaltake Level 10 VL30001N1Z BlackAluminumATXSuperFullTower Gaming Station Computer Case $893.53 (NCIX)
Mother Board: ASUS P6X58D Premium Motherboard $344.64 (Newegg)
Processor: Intel BX80613i7980X Core i7 980X Extreme Edition Processor $1,221.23 (Newegg)
Heatsink: Tuniq Tower 120 Extreme Universal CPU Cooler 120mm $87.27 (Newegg)
R.A.M.: CORSAIR DOMINATOR 8GB (2 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1600 (PC3 12800) Desktop Memory Model CMP8GX3M2A1600C9 $458.19 (Newegg)
Video Card: Diamond Radeon HD 5970 Video Card $793.78 (NCIX)
Hard-Disk Drive/Solid-State Drive: Intel X25-M Mainstream SSDSA2MH080G2R5 2.5" 80GB SATA II MLC Internal Solid State Drive (SSD) $248.58 (Newegg), Western Digital RE4 WD2003FYYS 2TB 7200 RPM 64MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb/s 3.5" Internal Hard Drive $323.17 (Bewawa)
Other Drives: Lite-On IHAS424-98 Internal DVD Writer $44.47 (NCIX)
Power Supply: Ultra X4 1200-Watt Modular Power Supply $306.72 (TD)

EXTRAS:
O.S.: Windows 7 Ultimate $203.39 (Bewawa)
Wireless Card: Sabrent 802.11n Wireless PCI Controller Card $43.98 (TD)
Sound Card: Asus Xonar Essence ST PCI 7.1 Sound Card $237.28 (NCIX)
Security Software: VIPRE Antivirus Premium 3 Years $115.00 (Sunbelt)

PERIPHERALS:
Keyboard: Logitech G19 Gaming Keyboard $247.56 (NCIX)
Mouse: Microsoft 3HA-00001 SideWinder X8 Mouse $84.74 (Newegg)
Mouse surface: RAZER Megasoma Professional Gaming Mouse Mat $56.49 (CC) & RAZER Destructor Professional Gaming Mat $62.00 (NCIX)
Monitor: Viewsonic VX2265wm 22" Widescreen LCD Monitor $392.12 (TD)
Speakers: Creative GigaWorks S750 700 Watts 7.1 Speaker $574.61 (NCIX, shipping not included)
Headset: Logitech G35 Gaming Headphone $145.76 (Bewawa)
Printer: Brother MFC-795cw Inkjet AiO Printer Wireless $204.27 (NCIX)

Please comment as you feel as always.
 
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