superflysmith
New Member
See the fourth post. My links sucked.
Last edited:
superflysmith said:I'll be ordering the parts next week. This computer will be used primarly for video editing, no gaming. Tell me if I should do better or if I'm going overkill on these parts.
Video Card
Asus AX800 PRO/TD Radeon X800 PRO AGP 8X 256MB DDR Video Card w/TV-Out & DVI Retail
ZipZoomFly Part#: 320593
Manufacturer: ASUS
Manufacturer SKU: AX800PROTD256
Our Price: $429.99
Powered by the world's powerful VPU -- ATI Radeon X800
ASUS AX800 PRO equips with newest ASUS-specific award-winning features and ATI®'s Radeon™ X800 PRO Visual Processing Unit (VPU), which owns both ultimate excellent cinematic resolution and fierce graphics computing power. Incorporating various state-of-the-art technologies such as ATI's SMARTSHADER™ HD, SMOOTHVISION™ HD, HYPERZ™ HD, VIDEOSHADER™ HD, 3 DC™, ASUS' GameFace™ Live , and rich-spectrum of unique ASUS innovations, Radeon X800 PRO is positioned on the enthusiast products and the most complete solution for the 3D and video application market
RAM notice it's DDR2 I will be getting 2 of these to start with
https://www.zipzoomfly.com/jsp/Prod...ctCode=85016-11
PCU
Intel Pentium® 4 550 Processor Prescott 3.4GHz, 800MHz FSB, Socket 775, 1MB Cache Retail ***Free 2nd Day***
w/Fan and Heatsink, 1MB Cache, 90nm
Manufacturer: INTEL
Manufacturer SKU: BX80547PG3400E
Our Price: $282.00
Introducing the boxed Intel® Pentium® 4 processor based on Intel’s industry-leading 90nm process technology, now in LGA775 socket. This new processor package incorporates 775 gold contacts that are mated into a 775 contact socket. This revolutionary technology improves integration and provides a path to future frequency and performance scaling. For more information on LGA775 and other platform components associated with the new Pentium 4 processor based on 90 nm technology. This new desktop processor will carry the same features of 1-MB L2 cache, 800 MHz system bus and support for Hyper-Threading Technology1 as its 478-pin package counterpart. Coinciding with this launch, Intel will also introduce processor numbers as a means to identify the various features of the Pentium 4 processor as well as other desktop and mobile processors. The processor numbers2 assigned for the Pentium 4 processor based on 90nm technology and new LGA775 socket are 520-560 which represent operating frequencies 2.80-3.60 GHz, 1-MB L2 cache and 800 MHz system bus.
Attract new business and transition existing customers with the latest generation of the Intel® Pentium® 4 processor. Desktop platforms based on the Intel® Pentium® 4 processor supporting Hyper-Threading Technology and the Intel® 925X/915 Express chipsets, create a multi-media environment where digital content is shared between devices in both the home and office. In addition, the Pentium 4 processor with HT Technology gives your customers the power to do more without slowing down. In fact, HT Technology can provide software performance benefits of up to 25 percent in multitasking situations, delivering advanced performance for both home and business PC users. Whatever the need, the Intel Pentium 4 processor has the capability to meet your customers computing demands.
1Enabling Hyper-Threading Technology requires a computer system with an Intel Pentium 4 processor with HT Technology, a chipset and BIOS that utilize this technology, and an operating system that includes optimizations for this technology. Performance will vary depending on the specific hardware and software you use. 2Intel processor numbers differentiate features within each processor family and are not a measure of performance.
Ram (2of these)
Corsair CM2X512-5400C4 512MB DDR2-667 XMS2-5400 Xtreme Performance Memory w/Black Heat Spreader Retail ***Free 2nd Day***
ZipZoomFly Part#: 85016-11
Manufacturer: CORSAIR
Manufacturer SKU: CM2X512-5400C4
Our Price: $199.00
The CM2X512-5400C4 is a 512 MByte, two-rank DDR2 SDRAM DIMM designed for extreme speed. This part delivers outstanding performance in the latest generation of DDR2-based motherboards. It has been tested extensively in multiple DDR2 motherboards to ensure compatibility and performance at its rated speed. This memory has been verified to operate at 667MHz at the low latencies of 4-4-4-12. This module is also available in matched pairs of "TwinX" modules tested as a set in a dual channel DDR2 motherboard.
Motherboard
Asus P5GDC-V Deluxe Intel 915G P4 800FSB LGA775 DDR2/DDR ATX Motherboard w/Audio, Gigabit LAN, RAID/Serial ATA Retail
533/800FSB, ATA/100, 2DDR2 DIMM/ 4DDR DIMM, 1 PCI Express x16, 2 PCI Express x1, 3PCI, USB 2.0, IEEE 1394, Audio, GbLAN, RAID/SATA
ZipZoomFly Part#: 240343
Manufacturer: ASUS
Manufacturer SKU: P5GDC-V DELUXE
Our Price: $179.00
# Intel LGA775 Pentium 4 CPU
# Intel 915G chipset
# Dual-Channel DDR&DDR2
# Intel Graphics Media Accelerator 900
# PCI Express Architecture
# High Definition Audio
# Stack Cool™
# AI NOS™
# AI NET2
Hard Drive I'll most likely upgrade this before next week. I'll get 1 of these now but 3 more later
Seagate Barracuda 7200.7 ST3160827AS 160GB Serial ATA 7200RPM Hard Drive w/8MB Buffer ***Free 2nd Day***
w/Native Command Queuing Technology
* Bare Drive
* Capacity: 160 GB
* Speed:7200 rpm
* Seek time:8.5 ms avg
* Interface: Serial ATA
* Key Advantages
o Native Command Queuing (NCQ) performance for today’s demanding applications
o Up to 20 percent performance improvement in certain applications
o Ease of integration with new Serial ATA cables and connectors and hot-swap capabilities
o Improved system and chasis airflow with thinner cabling
o No master/slave jumpers for fast and non-complex installation
o Backward compatible with all operating systems and software applications
* Best-Fit Applications
o PC gaming systems
o Entry-level SATA servers, including RAID
o Nearline storage
o Mainstream and high-performance PCs
o Cost-effective network attached storage
o PC-based home media servers
* The world’s first native Serial ATA interface with NCQ
o Point-to-point interface eliminates need for jumper settings
o Easy-to-use connectors for simple installation
o 100 percent software compatible with existing PCs
o Thinner, longer cable provides improved system airflow
o Highest areal density in the world— 100 Gbytes per 3.5-inch platter
* Highest Desktop Performance
o Up to 20 percent performance improvement over previous SATA
o Additional performance improvement with NCQ
- 33 percent on Random Reads
- 9 percent on Random Writes
o Performance measured with both Winbench and IOmeter tools
DVD burner
Samsung TS-H542A/WBCH 12X/8X Internal DVD±R/RW Drive (Black)
ZipZoomFly Part#: 172655
Manufacturer: SAMSUNG
Manufacturer SKU: TS-H542A/WBCH
Our Price: $79.99
DVD/CDRW
Samsung TS-H492A/WBGH DVD 16x + CDRW 52x32x52 Combo Drive w/Nero & PowerDVD Software (Black)
ZipZoomFly Part#: 172622
Manufacturer: SAMSUNG
Manufacturer SKU: TS-H492A/WBGH
Our Price: $45.99
I already have the case with a 420amp power supply
4W4K3 said:definetly save money on the RAM and go with something a lil' slower but with tighter timings...DDR667 isn't needed with a 3.4ghz CPU IMO. PC4400 or something will work fine. how you going to afford all this?
superflysmith said:I just wonder what it'd cost already built at a store.
Pointless. The GeForce6800GT is cheaper and superior hands down.Asus AX800 PRO/TD Radeon X800 PRO AGP 8X 256MB DDR Video Card w/TV-Out & DVI Retail
I noticed. Good choice on the Corsair.RAM notice it's DDR2 I will be getting 2 of these to start with
Shrug... for now.Intel Pentium® 4 550 Processor Prescott 3.4GHz, 800MHz FSB, Socket 775, 1MB Cache Retail ***Free 2nd Day***
Avoid this halfbreed. Get either of the other 9x5 boards.Asus P5GDC-V Deluxe Intel 915G P4 800FSB LGA775 DDR2/DDR ATX Motherboard w/Audio, Gigabit LAN, RAID/Serial ATA Retail
I'd get a real DVD burner: LiteOn, ASUS, Plextor, Pioneer etcSamsung TS-H542A/WBCH 12X/8X Internal DVD±R/RW Drive (Black)
I would defiitely get a real burner.Samsung TS-H492A/WBGH DVD 16x + CDRW 52x32x52 Combo Drive w/Nero & PowerDVD Software (Black)
No you dontI already have the case with a 420amp power supply
You and ur damn timingsdefinetly save money on the RAM and go with something a lil' slower but with tighter timings...
Yes but if he was getting DDR then definitely dont get that mobo, the i875P line is far superiorDDR667 isn't needed with a 3.4ghz CPU IMO. PC4400 or something will work fine.
Stick to the RAM. Get a cheaper video card.... like the 6800GT.So you think I should go cheaper on the RAM, I was thinking of going cheaper on the video card but now I'll have to consider your suggestions.
Well not priceless... i *do* charge $110/houryou gain knowledge of your system...which is priceless IMO
Praetor said:You and ur damn timings![]()
Praetor said:Well not priceless... i *do* charge $110/hour
LOL one of these days im gonna get it through to you timings dont matteryes im pissed at my ram cuz it wont run 2-2-2-5 like my first kit. fastest is 2.5-2-2-5 and I lose points on benchmarks and what not. but o well.
Heehee ... its fun stuffholy crap...i could only afford 30mins of build time lol.
If you burn DVDs at 16X (hell even 8X), that would just be plain .... (hmmm stupid is too mean) .... (hmmm stupid is too mean) ..... foolish.you can burn all dvd-r/+r regardless of their speed at 16X!!!
Praetor said:LOL one of these days im gonna get it through to you timings dont matter![]()
Benchmarking gives an overview -- not uberhard numbers that are carved in stone. You can get 1534765358 points today and tomorow, you ... eat a BigMac and you get 1534765359 ... does that mean BigMacs are good for your system?it varies my scores when benchmarking
Boot time is mostly bottlenecked by your HDD.it regulates my boot time/boot AT ALL
You run it at whatever timings you want... at the end of the day you will still be using PC3200 memory meaning you will still be capped at 3.2GB/s. THAT matters. And timings dont change that.(refuses to boot at 2-2-2-5)
Personally I think youre placing too much emphasis on benchmarks... again with the BigMac analogy above........ Benchmarks dont mean crap in the real world. Im sure you've read my posts before but if not:my friend (OCZ PC2700 dual*256) is running 191mhz 2-2-2-11 @ 2.4ghz and MATCHING my superPI timings...thats just sad considering im 235mhz 2.5-2-2-5 @ 2.6ghz. I should be beating scores from his machine...i think its cuz im on 2.5CAS...or no?
Praetor said:does that mean BigMacs are good for your system?![]()
Praetor said:Boot time is mostly bottlenecked by your HDD.
You havnt given enough information and the change is inconsequential, adding 3 more clock cycles to TRAS wont cause a boot time change of 10 seconds.then why does it change when I go from 2.5-2-2-5 to 2.5-3-3-8?
Time difference matters ... YES --- BUT it only matters ONCE -- the whole purpose of RAM is to access MULTIPLE times (to transfer data etc)wouldn't the time difference also be controlled by the access timing changes of the RAM?
When you pay for EL memory -- you're supposed to loosen it up to get the higher clocks. EB memory is for "higher clocks without concern for timings", EL memory is for "higher clocks with concern for timings"but when I pay for EL memory and don't get it...its upsetting
1. BigMac principlewhen someone clocked 45mhz LOWER than me gets the same results I do...thats upsetting/odd
By all means argue ... at the end of the day my overall comment is still "benchmarks dont mean shit except to highschoolers who have their parents buy them stuff and like to brag without knowing jack-shit-all" ... and while i'm not grouping you into that bunch ... it is important to note the BigMac "principle" of benchmarking -- the same thing happens to boottimes -- if data just so happens to be right where the head of the drive is then access time is 0ms vs your 8ms .... do it enough times and those ms add up ... but in the end, it doesnt matter because tomorow you can have a different boottimeim not trying to be argumentative...just backing up all the sh1t I talk lol.
Praetor said:By all means argue ... at the end of the day my overall comment is still "benchmarks dont mean shit except to highschoolers who have their parents buy them stuff and like to brag without knowing jack-shit-all" ... and while i'm not grouping you into that bunch ... it is important to note the BigMac "principle" of benchmarking -- the same thing happens to boottimes -- if data just so happens to be right where the head of the drive is then access time is 0ms vs your 8ms .... do it enough times and those ms add up ... but in the end, it doesnt matter because tomorow you can have a different boottime
They DO matter ... but usually only for tiny-transaction type of thingies (i.e., servers that have to chuck out half a billion things, all say, 512K each. Most people arent gonna be dealing with a zillion 512K files but more along the lines of 80MB chunks or what not.i see what you're saying. I just read lots of posts that go on and on about timing impritance and how to tweak your RAM timings for greater performance and all that...
And in no way was i suggesting that .... i was just painting a stereotypical picturei am in highskool and do liek to compare hardware...but by no means do I get FREE hardware from my parents lol.
You would have been better off with a 5750 (again, by asus)So I ended up getting the Asus Extreme AX600PRO/TD Radeon X600 XT PCI Express 128MB DDR Video Card w/TV-Out & DVI
Yeah get either of the other P5 boards by asus ... if you can afford it, the i925Praetor you said my mobo was a halfbread, I'm not totally sure what you mean by that. Is it because it takes either ddr or ddr2