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Ells Advanced Cheater
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Joined: 21 Nov 2008 Posts: 99
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Zarr Grandmaster Cheater
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Joined: 11 Jan 2008 Posts: 915 Location: localhost
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Posted: Sun May 17, 2009 4:01 am Post subject: Re: new to building computer, questions on items |
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| Ells wrote: | Well first of all, are these all compatible? Also, what video card/fan/heatsink should I get? I have no idea about those. Also, am I missing anything besides a video card/fan/heatsink? note: I have a CD drive or whatever it's called from an oldish computer.
Also, is this a pretty good build, and if you could, what would you change about it?
when it comes to software- what OS should I get?
Windows 7 kicks ass.
RAM- http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820231122
what do these mean?
Timing 5-5-5-15
Cas Latency 5
Data on DIMMs is arranged in rows and columns, the CAS latency is the measurement of how long it takes between the memory controller requesting to access a particular bit of memory located in a certain column and row.
When it comes to the advertised CAS latency timings, the first number is the Column Access Strobe, the amount of time, in cycles, between the the DIMM receiving the column access command and acting upon it.
The second is the Row Access Strobe, the delay, in number of cycles, between finding the row of a bit of data in the DIMM and finding the column.
The third is the Row Access Strobe precharge, the measurement of how much time it takes for the memory to stop accessing one row in the DIMM and start accessing another.
The last is the Active to Precharge Delay, the delay, in cycles, between the pins of the memory module electronically receiving a signal and the module starting the Row Access Strobe to locate and retrieve or to write it.
Lower is typically better, however it's quite impossible to tell the difference between a high delay and low delay in real-world applications. Worry more about the quality of the DIMM and the clock speed than the CAS latency. That RAM should be just fine.
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HDD- http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16822136074
Is there a big difference between 8MB and 16MB cache?
Lower cache = less efficient HDD when writing larger amounts of data. Try for at least a 16MB cache, 8MB sucks.
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CPU- http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16819115055
Does L2 cache matter a lot for processors?
In synthetic tests, no. In real-life applications, it can have a pretty significant impact. If you're just using this for casual use, as implied by the lack of a video card, it's more than fine.
Hell, you could get a e5200 and be fine if it's just for casual use. Perhaps this if the e5200 isn't enough.
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motherboard- http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813128357
not really sure what south bridge is/does. Does it really matter what south bridge I have?
If you're not planning to overclock or anything, no, not really.
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case/power- http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16811147118
is 500W plenty?
Wattage doesn't mean much. The +12v rail is much more important. Never trust the PSUs that come with cases, they suck. No exceptions.
Try:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16811119047
The cheapest PSU I'd trust to run your system:
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16817153023
misc stuff that doesn't matter:
mouse & keyboard- http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage.jsp?skuId=8478845&st=wave&lp=1&type=product&cp=1&id=1185267959364
^I have this on my current computer, it is great!
monitor- http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16824009175
thanks for helping me again guys! I know I'm not that great when it comes to computers. |
You might also be advised to get even a cheap GPU. http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16814161262 is orders of magnitude more powerful than the onboard GPU there, just $41 after rebate.
Better yet, post a budget as well as what it'd be used for (general interweb use, gaming, video editing/encoding, as examples) and I or someone else here might create a build for you.
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Ells Advanced Cheater
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Joined: 21 Nov 2008 Posts: 99
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Posted: Sun May 17, 2009 6:36 am Post subject: |
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I'm going to start playing WoW and I don't think my computer would be able to run it very well. My friend said his computer couldn't run it and it isn't a lot worse than mine. So I'd just be playing WoW and MS.
and 320gb HD would be plenty, I'm also going to put in a 160gb HD I have from a different computer.
stats on other HD:
160 GB Ultra DMA
7200 rpm
as for budget... I'd say around $600 tops without monitor/keyboard/mouse. I can go up to $700 if needed.
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SFP+ Comp. talk moderator
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Joined: 02 May 2007 Posts: 1228 Location: Sweden
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Posted: Sun May 17, 2009 9:55 am Post subject: |
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| Zarr wrote: |
Wattage doesn't mean much. The +12v rail is much more important. Never trust the PSUs that come with cases, they suck. No exceptions.
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Sonata III's 500w begs to differ. I've been running a gigabyte p35-ds4, q6600, 8800gt + some other random shit on it for a long long time now.
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Zarr Grandmaster Cheater
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Joined: 11 Jan 2008 Posts: 915 Location: localhost
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Posted: Sun May 17, 2009 2:48 pm Post subject: |
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| Safko wrote: | | Zarr wrote: |
Wattage doesn't mean much. The +12v rail is much more important. Never trust the PSUs that come with cases, they suck. No exceptions.
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Sonata III's 500w begs to differ. I've been running a gigabyte p35-ds4, q6600, 8800gt + some other random shit on it for a long long time now. |
Antec's PSUs are decent, Rosewill, on the other hand, not so much.
As for a $600 system, look at the one shown here. Honestly can't say there's anything I'd change.
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superweapons Grandmaster Cheater Supreme
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Joined: 04 Jan 2008 Posts: 1355 Location: The Internet. Where else?
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Posted: Sun May 17, 2009 3:39 pm Post subject: |
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A weak southbridge can slow down your system. The southbridge is connected to all the less "performance-oriented" components (drives, PCI bus, audio, USB), whereas the northbridge handles the memory, CPU, and GPU. If you had a slow southbridge, you could experience slow file transfers (bandwidth bottleneck), slower integrated GPU performance, etc.
It has very little affect on overclocking, as most of it is controlled by the northbridge.
I'm not actually sure how well the ICH7 southbridge performs, but the ICH9 on P35 boards is fast enough to handle the 110MB/s burst write speed that my 32MB-cache hard drive can do. The ICH7 is a bit on the old side, however, so maybe you could consider the ASUS P5QL-CM with a G43 northbridge, ICH10 southbridge, and faster integrated graphics.
Hard drives. I have two different hard drives, one 200GB 8MB 7200RPM SATA 3Gb/s drive, and a 640GB 32MB 7200RPM SATA 3Gb/s. Putting aside the capacity, and since both are made by Seagate (Maxtor is a subsidiary of Seagate), the 32MB-cache hard drive is much, much faster. I can usually get a 2-3x faster sustained write speed (60MB/s), and a 3x faster burst write speed (110MB/s), compared to the much slower 8MB drive capable of around 20-30MB/s sustained and up to 40-ish MB/s burst. I'm just saying you should consider a 32MB drive, especially since capacity doubles within a few dollars beyond your hard drive budget. Heck, I even got my drive (the large 640GB one) for $60 before the combo deal with my GTX 260.
I'd recommend the E5200 processor. It offers some awesome price/performance ratios, and has an outrageously high multiplier if you're considering overclocking, as well as utilizing the 45nm Wolfdale architecture fab update.
The G.Skill RAM you selected is good. Stick with it.
I'd get the dirt-cheap HD 4650 Zarr posted. It will be much faster than the integrated GMA 4500 (or 3100), and will probably improve your computing experience all around, even if you're not going to be doing very serious gaming.
I personally recommend the Corsair CMPSU-400CX. I even wrote a review about it (although from a different account from the one I used to purchase it). Thermaltake is pretty decent. OCZ is another PSU manufacturer that you might want to try. They're one of the few other PSU manufacturers that make quality PSUs for cheap (as with Corsair). The use stable PC Power & Cooling internals (at least indicated by my source), but they don't supply as much power to the "goods" as Corsair PSUs with Seasonic internals do, and their rails are a bit less stable. They're still in compliance with ATX standards though (up to 5% rail variation, IIRC).
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Ells Advanced Cheater
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Joined: 21 Nov 2008 Posts: 99
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superweapons Grandmaster Cheater Supreme
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Posted: Sun May 17, 2009 8:42 pm Post subject: |
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Newegg's supply-and-demand system makes the pricing seem odd at times.
"Dual Channel" is when two similar RAM sticks are put together on the motherboard and bandwidth is increased. So, two 1GB sticks of RAM would be noticeably faster than one 2GB stick, assuming the two groups are from the same brand and are similar models.
PCI Express 2.0 x16 is the high-performance interface on the motherboard. It's usually where you place a graphics card.
For your build, I would recommend a dedicated graphics card. Your computer will be heavily bottlenecked in many high-performance 3-D apps. This HD 4670 seems like a good deal.
Wow, almost all the HD 4770s are sold out. It's still a bit too expensive ATM IMO, drop to $80 before rebates and it'd be a good deal.
Stick with the stock cooling. The Q8200 isn't much of an overclocker with its high FSB, low operating frequency and multiplier.
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Ells Advanced Cheater
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Joined: 21 Nov 2008 Posts: 99
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Posted: Sun May 17, 2009 8:56 pm Post subject: |
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I guess I'll get the HDD that is $5 cheaper, but has 140GB more space.
so that video card would be good enough for WoW? If so, that would bring the total to $477, not counting a case.
Any chance you could find me a case? I seem to fail finding out if the motherboard can go with the case.
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superweapons Grandmaster Cheater Supreme
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Ells Advanced Cheater
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Joined: 21 Nov 2008 Posts: 99
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Posted: Sun May 17, 2009 9:25 pm Post subject: |
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restricted to the microATX format?
I'm going to bed if like 5 minutes, I'll get back at ~3pm EST
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Zarr Grandmaster Cheater
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Joined: 11 Jan 2008 Posts: 915 Location: localhost
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Posted: Mon May 18, 2009 11:53 am Post subject: |
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The HD4650 should be able to max out most areas of WoW on high settings, however, according to a few people, a few areas in the WoTLK expansion run as low as 30FPS even with an HD4850.
I'll see if I can throw together a build with your specs for as cheaply as possible in a bit here.
EDIT:
EP45-UD3L ($95) or PQ5L pro ($87)
Either is a very solid board, however the PQ5L pro has a slightly older north bridge(P43 as opposed to P45). The average user won't really notice a difference between the two.
Also, if you choose the EP45-UD3L, I recommend this combo. Once you take into account the $20 off for the combo and the MIR of $25, the $75 PSU is effectively $30, bringing the total for the mobo and PSU to $125. Given it does have 2 18 amp +12v rails, that's not much of a problem considering what it's powering.
Q8200 ($165) or E7400 ($120)
To be quite frank about it, the Q8200 is extreme overkill for WoW. The E7500 would work just fine. If you really must, however, I suppose you could get the Q8200.
Antec 300 ($59)
Very solid case at a great price.
2x2GB Corsair RAM ($47)
$1 cheaper than the G.Skill RAM. Can't go wrong with Corsair.
Corsair 400W PSU ($55, $45 after MIR)
If you don't trust the combo deal for whatever reason, I suppose this is the next best alternative. As said above, can't go wrong with corsair.
MSi Radeon HD 4650 ($56, $36 after $20 MIR)
Dirt cheap, sufficient to max out WoW with high settings. Integrated graphics would hardly be able to run it at low settings with a decent, consistent frame rate (as in, not loosing 20FPS for a moment after every explosion or something).
With the suggested parts/combos as well as the Q8200, despite it being overkill, totals out to $432 after rebates. With the E7400 it would total out to $387 after rebates.
EDIT2: Shit, forgot an HDD. Oh well.
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Last edited by Zarr on Mon May 18, 2009 7:40 pm; edited 1 time in total |
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kls85 I post too much
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Joined: 18 Jul 2008 Posts: 2757 Location: Under ur bed
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Posted: Mon May 18, 2009 1:31 pm Post subject: Re: new to building computer, questions on items |
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| Ells wrote: | Well first of all, are these all compatible? Also, what video card/fan/heatsink should I get? I have no idea about those. Also, am I missing anything besides a video card/fan/heatsink? note: I have a CD drive or whatever it's called from an oldish computer.
Also, is this a pretty good build, and if you could, what would you change about it?
when it comes to software- what OS should I get?
RAM- http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820231122
what do these mean?
Timing 5-5-5-15
Cas Latency 5 |
The full detail of what these numbers mean will make your mind go in a downward spiral, so I'll make this easy.
The numbers you see on that ram are called timings, the lower the better.
Most common DDR2 uses 5-5-5-12 and lower (faster) one has times like 4-4-4-12 or so.
If that is still confusing then hope this will help...
Lets say there are 2 dogs, one has a brain of 5-5-5-15 and the other with a brain of 4-4-4-12. You threw a ball and the dog with the faster mind (4-4-4-12) will go after the ball first because he's able to recognize a object in front of him faster than the dog with a slower mind.
Note that memory timings are not like a mind of dogs, this is just to simpilify how memory timings really work.
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Ells Advanced Cheater
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Joined: 21 Nov 2008 Posts: 99
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Posted: Mon May 18, 2009 4:49 pm Post subject: |
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Zarr, the only thing different about those montherboards are the faster memory standard and 4x240pin slots instead of two, I only need two so I'll go with the one I stated earlier. Also the FSB of the processor is 1333MHz, so a faster FSB doesn't matter. And you forgot a hard drive in the build.
What is different between home, premium, professional, and ultimate operating systems?
Also, if I have a hard drive with windows XP on it, could I just use that for the operating system?
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