Hey everyone,
I'm thinking about getting a new computer because my laptop just isn't cutting it for the higher end apps and rendering these days. I've custom built computers in the past and really enjoy doing it, but I've been out of the technology loop for a little while. Before I start my hours and hours of research and comparing, I was just curious what sort of specs you have that are working really well for you now, and/or specs that you wish you had to make your working at home easier.
Replies
Dual core 5000+ 2.60 ghz
4 gigs of ram
144.99$ Case: Antec P182,
279.99$ Chip: Intel Core i7 920
239.99$ Motherboard: Asus P6T
94.99$ Memory: G.Skill DDR3-1600 6GB
89.99$ Hard Disk: Western Digital 1TB (1,000GB)
28.99$ DVD-R Samsung 22x
149.99$ Nvidia Geforce 9800GT
Total 1033.93$
Vidcard alternatives if going for the best on the market :
264.99$ Nvidia Geforce GTX 275
or
249.99$ ATI Radeon 4890
@Damien: I'm looking to invest a bit more than $500. I definitely need more RAM than I do now though. I'd probably take 6 gigs instead of 4.
You won't find a newer/better processor than the core i7.
Watch out for noisy power supplies or cheap case fans. You have a limited window to return those kinds of items and don't think "its ok, I like jet engine white noise, its soothing... or I can drown it out with music". A few weeks of that nonsense and you'll cringe every time you push the power button.
Also make sure to pick the right power supply, pay attention to just how much power you need and buy appropriately. Buy too big and it will generate a lot of heat, noise and run up your power bill, for no reason. MAWR power isn't always the perfect solution.
I'm currently trying to decide on a build (Maya/Modo/Mudbox/PS). 1k will buy the core i7 build, or I could drop a mere 400 and get an AMD Phenom II x4 based system. Some of the benchmarks I've seen put the i7 at about 20% more speed, and hopefully a 1366 based mobo will have a long lifespan.
Anyone here have any insights into the amd x3/x4 w/ ddr2 800 vs an i7 ddr3 build?
Your best bet is to track down the specs of whatever graphics card you plan to install and look for the min power requirements. You should try to exceed those min requirements due to all of your other components power needs.
The real issue isn't just the overall watts, but the amps on the +12v rail. Not enough juice delivered to the card and you'll get wonky artifacts.
COOLER MASTER Centurion 534 RC-534-KKN2-GP Black Aluminum & Mesh bezel / SECC Chassis ATX Mid Tower Computer Case - Retail
Western Digital Caviar SE16 WD6400AAKS 640GB 7200 RPM SATA 3.0Gb/s 3.5" Internal Hard Drive - OEM
EVGA 896-P3-1170-AR GeForce GTX 275 896MB 448-bit DDR3 PCI Express 2.0 x16 HDCP Ready SLI Supported Video Card - Retail
OCZ StealthXStream OCZ700SXS 700W ATX12V / EPS12V SLI Ready CrossFire Ready Active PFC Power Supply - Retail
Patriot 6GB (3 x 2GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1333 (PC3 10666) Desktop Memory Model PVT36G1333LLK - Retail
ASUS P6T LGA 1366 Intel X58 ATX Intel Motherboard - Retail
Intel Core i7 920 Nehalem 2.66GHz LGA 1366 130W Quad-Core Processor Model BX80601920 - Retail
EDIT: I wonder if this power supply would be better? http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817702008&Tpk=BFG%20LS-550
How does that even work with this build??? The Nvidia GeForce GTX 275 says on the spec page that it What is going on??
I can see the wisdom of using a lower wattage, but more efficient high quality supply- especially if you're paying the electrical bills.
lol, thats my computer right now, minus the HD.
if you go for a cheaper case, you might end up having to fork out another 70$ for a new PSU, to run the geforce 9800GT without a hitch.
it requires at least 600 watts of power.
EDIT: At any rate, I am thinking about waiting until October until getting this. The prices will drop, some new technology will be out, and I sort of want to wait until Windows 7 comes out. Thoughts?
Take in consideration to buy a mono-rail psu, multi-rail psus with wire organization have problems of electric noise with the new videocards (they demands too much energy and a 12v rail with 18 amps are not enough to have a good and stable system without noise).
im mostly going with the one from the last rig or buying a 20$ cheap thing ...
arrangemonk, It's not all about looks, if you buy right, it will have proper air flow. ASUS has started putting life spans on their parts, even if you don't overclock and have bad air flow you greatly shorten that life span.
It will be easier to work on, probably screwless and not designed in a way to be barely functional but actually helpful with a single removeable HD drive bay they all plug into and swing out mobo panel.
It will probably be light weight, will reduce noise instead of increase it and it will outlive the pieces you put in it. Putting an end to the $20 cases every time you upgrade.
Spark
P.S: Edited as I do not want a big RIG truck, or a animation RIG built:)
289 Pages.
^Toms Hardware
Rig is a reasonable term. "PC Rig" produces 38,800 search results on google with the websites being pretty accurate: http://lmgtfy.com/?q=%22PC+Rig%22. Whether or not it was the best, well known, choice for use in a thread title, maybe, maybe not. It's a pretty well known term, and definitely not the only one with multiple definitions, even slang ones. Well, I guess you learn something new every day right?
@Spark: Geesh! Wish I had that sort of money Anyway, the article I'm following to help build this (the one posted above) also has another more advanced system configuration than the hot rod. Link: http://arstechnica.com/hardware/guides/2009/04/ars-technica-system-guide-april-2009-edition.ars/3. That sucker is priced at $12,000, but you can work backwords and cut a lot of their crap out. Check out Tom's Hardware too, he usually posts a lot of good system builds (New term anyone!?). There's more than this, but here is a nice article: http://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/micro-atx-sff,2311.html
@Blaizer: Thanks for the advice, I think I will wait then. Any idea when this new stuff is due out exactly? October is such a long way away Hopefully that P182 case price will go down too by then.
Chassi - ZALMAN EXTREME HYBRID LQ1000 (Integrated water-cooling) - $678.99
Video Card - BFG GEFORCE GTX 295 H20C (Water cooled/overclocked edition) - $958.83
Motherboard - ASUS RAMPAGE II EXTREME - $399.00
Processor - INTEL CORE I7 965 EXTREME 3.2GHZ - $1171.89
Processor Watercooling block - ZM-WB5 Plus - $49.95
Memory - 6GB DDR3 XMS3 INTEL I7 PC10666 1333MHZ - $119
HDD (main) - WESTERN DIGITAL VELOCIRAPTOR 300GB 3.5# 10K RPM SATA/300 16MB - $265
Total - $3642.66 + a few hundred
Haven't received the PSU yet, and i've forgotten which one i bought, so i left that one out. But anyway, im hoping this rig will last for some time. Also ofc running on vista 64bit and later on windows 7 64-bit.
An i7 920 and a GTX 260 will handle almost anything you can throw at it with no problem. For that matter the Asus P6T is a fantastic board for about half that price.
I mean if it's really worth it for the extra bit of power, and money's no concern, why not? But we all know that there will be something faster in 6 months anyway. Call me a cheap bastard but for me it just isn't worth the tier 1 premium procs and cards due to the inflated price point. I'd prefer to just go with second-best equipment and fund my retirement, personally.
Off the top of my head:
- three way SLI (x16/x16/x16).
- 24 gigs of RAM.
- Liquid cooling.
- Solid state harddrives.
'Edit'...or you could scale back the pc and buy a cintiq to go with it if you don't have one. Just a thought.
I know
Altho, it's not for bragging rights. The integrated watercooling + the video card and such makes for a VERY silent high-end pc, which is good since im strangely sensitive to fan noises.
Also, money right now isn't an issue for me. It's a long story but i pretty much had around 5k that i could spend on pc hardware only.