Psu

mitsman23

New Member
I am a noob and I am teaching myself how to build. I ordered my hardware for my first build but I am a little confused about choosing a PSU. My first question is does it matter if you have more wattage than needed for your system if you plan to upgrade more down the line. I just wanted to start with just the bare essentials and go from there once i get the computer up and running. If anybody can help out it would be greatly appreciated. Here is a list of what I have so far to build my computer.

AMD Phenom II 1090T Black edition CPU
Gigabyte 890 GPA-UD3H w/ integrated ATI Radeon 4290 Motherboard
Seagate Barracuda 500 GB HDD
OCZ GOLD 4GB RAM x 4 (16GB)
Cooler Master HAF 932 ATX Full Tower Case
ASUS Black DVD/DVDR/CD/CDR drive....

Power Supply......?????:confused:
Any help is greatly appreciated I new right from the begining this was the part that was going to have me confused the most.
 
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Two parts.

If your never planing on getting a better video card and just use the onboard, you could get by with a quality 500/550W power supply. Antec/Corsair/Seasonic/OCZ/BFG/Silverstone/BFG/Xcilo.

If you do plan on getting a Video card later, what range card are you going for?
 
I think that should have me covered I'll just have to bite the bullet later if I overclock and add alot of hardware later thanks stranglehold
 
testing hardware

Thanks for you advice on the power supply it's all hooked up now and all of my wires are organized. So I definately made a big mistake of not bench testing. I was wondering though I don't have the RAM yet but would it harm my system if I attempted to start it just to check to see what works because that's what I did today. The fans all worked, the HDD spun and the LED indicators lit up, the DVDR drive was recieving power and I was able to hit the eject and open and close it. I also got a multiple beep warning that kept going but would stop for an extra moment once in a while and then start back up. From what I read in similar questions they said that that's a good sign and it means you CPU is functioning. Is that right?
 
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