Hello, first post here. I've built 2 computers in the past, I know a good bit about how computers work on a low level (I'm an EE student), but I haven't looked at building a new rig in a while.
Budget-- around 600-700 hopefully... I'm a cheapskate.
Uses-- playing games, hopefully games in the future that haven't come out as well.
My last computer was mostly built 2 years ago, but also with some upgrades over time. I'm currently running a P4 2.4 GHz HT, 800 FSB, 512 RAM, with an ATI 9800 Pro graphics card, and an old 80 GB WD HD.
I've recently gotten some time on my hands and I've gotten back into gaming. I'm playing COD4 and it plays at a halfway decent framerate, but at the lowest possible settings. The other problem I have is that the maps take forever to load and I get into games late because my HD is old and slow. I was looking into upgrading the HD and putting another 512 or possibly 1 GB of RAM in, but then i realized it was gonna cost me a lot more than I really wanted to put into this computer considering how old it is currently. So I've started to look at building a new rig.
Let me know if there are any bottlenecks that can be fixed relatively cheaply, and if this would be able to game at a good frame rate and high enough resolution/quality to look good hooked up to my HDTV. I'm also not sure if I will be able to use my old case/power supply, or if I should just buy new ones. My case is just a standard steel case, no ports on the front (this is annoying, but not a major problem, I dunno). My PSU is old, but it's a 400W unit. I think that 400W will be enough to power my rig (tell me if I'm wrong), but I'm under the impression that it won't have the proper amperages to power a new video card and new motherboard/cpu.
$25 -- hec Steel ATX-Mid Tower, with front USB/audio ports. 1x80 mm rear fan and side air ducts for cooling.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16811121037
$90 -- Seasonic 430W, 80-Plus certified power supply.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817151033&Tpk=430gb+seasonic
$150 -- Gigabyte MoBo, 16 GB maximum memory supported, 4 slots, dual channel, DDR2 1066, 2000 MHz Hyper-Transport FSB, AM2+/AM2 cpu socket, 2- PCI Express 2.0 16x.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813128075&Tpk=ga-ma-790x-ds4
$80 -- Athlon 64 X2 AM2 4600+, 90 nm, 2x 512 L2 cache, 89 w thermal.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819103751&Tpk=ada4600cubox
$70 -- WD 16mb cache, 250gb, 7200 RPM. Multiples on newegg.com, doesn't seem to matter.
$70 -- G.skill 2GB (2 x 1GB), DDR2 1066 (PC2 8500)
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820231144
?? video card ?? I'm looking at the nVidia 8600 series, around $130, but I'm not exactly sure yet on which one to get.
I come up with a total price around $615. My goal is to be able to expand this system into early next generation in a year or so, using an AM2+ cpu, 16 gb of ram, add another nVidia card and use the SLI to connect them, etc. I spec'd the PSU and motherboard to hopefully be able to accommodate this future expansion. If you know of anywhere I can cut costs without sacrificing my goals (or at least not too much), let me know. I've looked at barebones systems, or cases with PSU, but I couldn't find something that really suited me. If you think my old PSU and case will work fine, please let me know that as well. I'm unsure of whether I should buy the OEM CPU and put a nice heatsink/fan on it, and buy a heatsink/fan on my VGA as well, possibly OC both of them? I've never OC'd anything before. Do I also need a fan on my HD, or will it be fine? Anything else I'm missing, please let me know. And do I have to use my old USB 2.0 card that I put in my computer to get usb ports out to the front of the case, or is this built into the mobo/case combo somehow? Audio as well, how does that work?
Thank you very, very much if you actually read all of this... or even any of it. I got kind of long winded. I just had a lot of questions about a lot of different things.
Thanks,
Kai
Budget-- around 600-700 hopefully... I'm a cheapskate.
Uses-- playing games, hopefully games in the future that haven't come out as well.
My last computer was mostly built 2 years ago, but also with some upgrades over time. I'm currently running a P4 2.4 GHz HT, 800 FSB, 512 RAM, with an ATI 9800 Pro graphics card, and an old 80 GB WD HD.
I've recently gotten some time on my hands and I've gotten back into gaming. I'm playing COD4 and it plays at a halfway decent framerate, but at the lowest possible settings. The other problem I have is that the maps take forever to load and I get into games late because my HD is old and slow. I was looking into upgrading the HD and putting another 512 or possibly 1 GB of RAM in, but then i realized it was gonna cost me a lot more than I really wanted to put into this computer considering how old it is currently. So I've started to look at building a new rig.
Let me know if there are any bottlenecks that can be fixed relatively cheaply, and if this would be able to game at a good frame rate and high enough resolution/quality to look good hooked up to my HDTV. I'm also not sure if I will be able to use my old case/power supply, or if I should just buy new ones. My case is just a standard steel case, no ports on the front (this is annoying, but not a major problem, I dunno). My PSU is old, but it's a 400W unit. I think that 400W will be enough to power my rig (tell me if I'm wrong), but I'm under the impression that it won't have the proper amperages to power a new video card and new motherboard/cpu.
$25 -- hec Steel ATX-Mid Tower, with front USB/audio ports. 1x80 mm rear fan and side air ducts for cooling.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16811121037
$90 -- Seasonic 430W, 80-Plus certified power supply.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817151033&Tpk=430gb+seasonic
$150 -- Gigabyte MoBo, 16 GB maximum memory supported, 4 slots, dual channel, DDR2 1066, 2000 MHz Hyper-Transport FSB, AM2+/AM2 cpu socket, 2- PCI Express 2.0 16x.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813128075&Tpk=ga-ma-790x-ds4
$80 -- Athlon 64 X2 AM2 4600+, 90 nm, 2x 512 L2 cache, 89 w thermal.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819103751&Tpk=ada4600cubox
$70 -- WD 16mb cache, 250gb, 7200 RPM. Multiples on newegg.com, doesn't seem to matter.
$70 -- G.skill 2GB (2 x 1GB), DDR2 1066 (PC2 8500)
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820231144
?? video card ?? I'm looking at the nVidia 8600 series, around $130, but I'm not exactly sure yet on which one to get.
I come up with a total price around $615. My goal is to be able to expand this system into early next generation in a year or so, using an AM2+ cpu, 16 gb of ram, add another nVidia card and use the SLI to connect them, etc. I spec'd the PSU and motherboard to hopefully be able to accommodate this future expansion. If you know of anywhere I can cut costs without sacrificing my goals (or at least not too much), let me know. I've looked at barebones systems, or cases with PSU, but I couldn't find something that really suited me. If you think my old PSU and case will work fine, please let me know that as well. I'm unsure of whether I should buy the OEM CPU and put a nice heatsink/fan on it, and buy a heatsink/fan on my VGA as well, possibly OC both of them? I've never OC'd anything before. Do I also need a fan on my HD, or will it be fine? Anything else I'm missing, please let me know. And do I have to use my old USB 2.0 card that I put in my computer to get usb ports out to the front of the case, or is this built into the mobo/case combo somehow? Audio as well, how does that work?
Thank you very, very much if you actually read all of this... or even any of it. I got kind of long winded. I just had a lot of questions about a lot of different things.
Thanks,
Kai