I have a pc with proprietary parts, meaning I'm currently unable to expand my system any further without exceeding the power limit of the 180watt power supply. It does have an i3-8300 and I was wondering if at this point it's even worth it to bother building a pc with this CPU.
It's mainly for going to be for music recording and some light gaming (meaning current games at 1080p medium settings) , but even for that I'm not sure if this CPU will end up bottlenecking. Also the RAM for this CPU doesn't go over 2400MHZ and I don't know if this will result in higher latency between my DAW and music equipment than higher frequencies would.
I have some parts lined up for a build with this CPU totaling around €270,- which would replace all proprietary parts
- Asrock B365M PRO4-F
- Sharkoon WPM Gold Zero 650W
- Zalman S2
- 2x G.Skill Aegis DDR4 8GB 2400MHZ
This doesn't include a GPU, and that's mainly because I want to wait just a bit longer so that 3050TI's are actually around MSRP.
What would you guys do in my situation? Sell this pc and build one from scratch or is this build still 'viable' in 2022?
It's mainly for going to be for music recording and some light gaming (meaning current games at 1080p medium settings) , but even for that I'm not sure if this CPU will end up bottlenecking. Also the RAM for this CPU doesn't go over 2400MHZ and I don't know if this will result in higher latency between my DAW and music equipment than higher frequencies would.
I have some parts lined up for a build with this CPU totaling around €270,- which would replace all proprietary parts
- Asrock B365M PRO4-F
- Sharkoon WPM Gold Zero 650W
- Zalman S2
- 2x G.Skill Aegis DDR4 8GB 2400MHZ
This doesn't include a GPU, and that's mainly because I want to wait just a bit longer so that 3050TI's are actually around MSRP.
What would you guys do in my situation? Sell this pc and build one from scratch or is this build still 'viable' in 2022?