So this is the system I've more or less been looking to put together. I've been putting myself on a bit of a crash course of computer building over the past couple of days, being that this will be my first custom computer. As far as I know everything should be compatible, but, if you guys could have a look and let me know if I've missed something, I'd appreciate it.
Processor: Intel Core 2 Duo E6600
Motherboard: MSI P965 Neo F w/Dual DDR2 800
Memory: Either 1 GB Kingston PC2-4200 DDR2 SDRAM, 1 GB Kingston PC2-5300 DDR2 SDRAM, or 1 GB MUSHKIN EM2-6400 Enhanced DDR2 SDRAM
Case: Antec SLK3000B Black Super Mid Tower
Power Supply: Either OCZ 600W GameXtreme w/ Quad +12V or Enermax 535W EG565AX-VE FMA II
Hard Drive: Seagate 300GB Barracuda 7200.9 SATA II w/ NCQ, 16MB cache
Optical Drive: LiteOn SHM-165H6S 16x16 +/-RW Dual Layer Drive w/ Lightscribe
Video Card: eVGA e-GeForce 7600 GTS 256MB PCI-E or Sapphire Radeon X1600XT 256MB PCI-E
Sound Card: Creative Labs Sound Blaster Audigy 4 SE, 7.1
Operating System: Windows XP
Now, there are a few things I'm not sure about, which is why there are some categories with more than one option. Just to clarify some things, I don't plan on using multiple video cards, or overclocking anything. As far as gaming goes, I want a system that will be able to handle new games, but I don't necessarily need the top of the line most expensive parts. (I don't need to be able to count the nose hairs of the zombie before he gets done in by my Boomstick.
)
Here are the issues I'm concerned with:
1. Is the motherboard sufficient for what I want? It only has 1 PCI 16x slot, which as far as I know is only needed for the video card. Is that correct, or do I need a motherboard with more than one?
2. The motherboard can take 8G of RAM, but only 2G of DDR2 800. Does the configuration matter ie. 4 sticks of 512M or 2 sticks of 1G? (Even though I'm only putting in 1G now, I will probably upgrade to 2G within a year.)
3. I'd rather go with the eVGA card, because while the both of them are the about the same price, the eVGA is slightly better. However, does the fact that an MSI motherboard supports Crossfire and not SLI raise any problems with the fact that I want to go with an nVidia card, keeping in mind I am only putting in 1. (On a bit of a side note, when Dx10 cards come out, will the Neo-F motherboard be compatible?)
4. The monitor I plan on getting is a BenQ FP93GX 19in Digital LCD (contrast ratio: 700:1 resolution: 1280x1024 SXGA response time: 2ms GTG.) Would either video card have a problem working with this choice?
5. While I am prepared to spend the extra money on the Mushkin EM2-6400 RAM, I was hoping to get away with either of the Kingston RAM. Is the difference between 800Mz and 667Mz/533Mz something that would be felt in real applications, or is it just a difference that only shows up in benchmarks? (Something strange regarding the specs for the Mushkin. In the product info. it states that it is an "unbuffered 240-Pin module," which is good, but in the specs. section it says "pins: 184 Pin DIMM Unbuffered." Anyone know what this means?)
6. Also, regarding memory, the specs for the Mushkin RAM put the voltage at 1.8V to 2.0V, (newegg had it at 1.9V I believe) while the P965 motherboard only supports 1.8V. Is that a problem?
7. For the power supply, the OCZ is definitely better, as well as more expensive, but do I really need it for my system? Or should I just go with the OCZ and make sure my bases are covered?
So, those are things I have questions about. Does anyone see any other problems with this setup that I have missed?
Any help and opinions would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Processor: Intel Core 2 Duo E6600
Motherboard: MSI P965 Neo F w/Dual DDR2 800
Memory: Either 1 GB Kingston PC2-4200 DDR2 SDRAM, 1 GB Kingston PC2-5300 DDR2 SDRAM, or 1 GB MUSHKIN EM2-6400 Enhanced DDR2 SDRAM
Case: Antec SLK3000B Black Super Mid Tower
Power Supply: Either OCZ 600W GameXtreme w/ Quad +12V or Enermax 535W EG565AX-VE FMA II
Hard Drive: Seagate 300GB Barracuda 7200.9 SATA II w/ NCQ, 16MB cache
Optical Drive: LiteOn SHM-165H6S 16x16 +/-RW Dual Layer Drive w/ Lightscribe
Video Card: eVGA e-GeForce 7600 GTS 256MB PCI-E or Sapphire Radeon X1600XT 256MB PCI-E
Sound Card: Creative Labs Sound Blaster Audigy 4 SE, 7.1
Operating System: Windows XP
Now, there are a few things I'm not sure about, which is why there are some categories with more than one option. Just to clarify some things, I don't plan on using multiple video cards, or overclocking anything. As far as gaming goes, I want a system that will be able to handle new games, but I don't necessarily need the top of the line most expensive parts. (I don't need to be able to count the nose hairs of the zombie before he gets done in by my Boomstick.
Here are the issues I'm concerned with:
1. Is the motherboard sufficient for what I want? It only has 1 PCI 16x slot, which as far as I know is only needed for the video card. Is that correct, or do I need a motherboard with more than one?
2. The motherboard can take 8G of RAM, but only 2G of DDR2 800. Does the configuration matter ie. 4 sticks of 512M or 2 sticks of 1G? (Even though I'm only putting in 1G now, I will probably upgrade to 2G within a year.)
3. I'd rather go with the eVGA card, because while the both of them are the about the same price, the eVGA is slightly better. However, does the fact that an MSI motherboard supports Crossfire and not SLI raise any problems with the fact that I want to go with an nVidia card, keeping in mind I am only putting in 1. (On a bit of a side note, when Dx10 cards come out, will the Neo-F motherboard be compatible?)
4. The monitor I plan on getting is a BenQ FP93GX 19in Digital LCD (contrast ratio: 700:1 resolution: 1280x1024 SXGA response time: 2ms GTG.) Would either video card have a problem working with this choice?
5. While I am prepared to spend the extra money on the Mushkin EM2-6400 RAM, I was hoping to get away with either of the Kingston RAM. Is the difference between 800Mz and 667Mz/533Mz something that would be felt in real applications, or is it just a difference that only shows up in benchmarks? (Something strange regarding the specs for the Mushkin. In the product info. it states that it is an "unbuffered 240-Pin module," which is good, but in the specs. section it says "pins: 184 Pin DIMM Unbuffered." Anyone know what this means?)
6. Also, regarding memory, the specs for the Mushkin RAM put the voltage at 1.8V to 2.0V, (newegg had it at 1.9V I believe) while the P965 motherboard only supports 1.8V. Is that a problem?
7. For the power supply, the OCZ is definitely better, as well as more expensive, but do I really need it for my system? Or should I just go with the OCZ and make sure my bases are covered?
So, those are things I have questions about. Does anyone see any other problems with this setup that I have missed?
Any help and opinions would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,