Re: Suggestions for PC build
Quote:
Originally Posted by
sandman_1
Eventually going to build a PC for my Dad and going to reuse some old parts of mine for it to save some money.
What I have:
4GB RAM DDR2 1GB sticks
Nvidia 7900GT
Antec Truepower Trio 550watt
ATX Case
I guess what I need:
Motherboard (With on board sound preferably)
HDD
CPU
DVD Burner
He doesn't need anything fancy as he won't be gaming or anything intensive like that. Need a motherboard, a good one, with 4 mem slots and Intel CPU. Like to keep everything around the $200 range.
By reusing the RAM you are severely limiting your choices, I don't believe you will get what you want for that price unless you look on the secondhand market, maybe craigslist perhaps ?
Re: Suggestions for PC build
That sucks, I got those sticks for free.
Without the RAM, what would you suggest?
Re: Suggestions for PC build
Re: Suggestions for PC build
Quote:
Originally Posted by
sandman_1
That sucks, I got those sticks for free.
Without the RAM, what would you suggest?
The RAM is the cheapest part of the build; it's one of the last items of hardware you should should consider.
Alternatively, for cheap builds/parts, Craigslist is a great place to start.
Re: Suggestions for PC build
Out of curiosity why are you limiting yourself to Intel CPUs? Are you saying you already have an Intel CPU, or you want a new one with the board?
Re: Suggestions for PC build
I would chose Intel over AMD without hesitation.
If you ignore the CPUs themselves, going Intel gives you access to better motherboard options...the ICH series storage controllers are worth it by themselves.
As I see it Sandman, you have two choices, one of which fits your budget but is labor intensive, the other costs more upfront but has less after-care.
The cheap option requires a supply of used machines that you Frankenstein into a serviceable PC and then upgrade/repair as desired/necessary.
The folks I know who do this are currently sitting in the Q6600 range of chips with a couple gigs of DDR2. This level of OEM usually accepts SATA although many times only for the HDDs, the opticals will still be PATA (so there are a limited number of SATA ports).
If you can cram enough RAM into one of these, they will run Win7 just fine, I no longer consider XP a viable option.
Because the machine is used there is the inevitable risk of component failure and the canny advocate of this approach is always looking for better castoffs to incorporate, so it takes some work to keep going.
The second option would be increasing the budget, buy all new and turn the user out on their own like the OEMs do.
Reliability is better and your postbuild support will probably amount to little more than the misplaced icon or unopenable attachment.
I would figure $500-700 as a reasonable range to build a new PC (not including software).
Re: Suggestions for PC build
I could price out a solid system for you for under $400, everything brand new, quality, and sure to be performing beyond what it's really needed for (doesn't include monitor). Even cheaper if you want to reuse your case and power supply (I already assumed you would reuse graphics).
Re: Suggestions for PC build
@macky
I am always had Intel CPU's. I guess it is just a preference.
@clocker
Yea I don't mind building from a used machine. He doesn't need anything fancy and he is currently retired so that is why I need to keep it somewhat cheap. He gave me 2 old PC's of his, pretty old ones. None of them even have DVD burners and one had a DVD ROM drive and both probably have AGP slots and stereo sound cards. I can reuse the cases even if they are retro. He won't care about that though. My old 7900GT is more than enough for his needs as would be the 550w power supply.
@Skiz
Didn't think about Craigslist. I will check that out, thanks.
Re: Suggestions for PC build
Quote:
Originally Posted by
sandman_1
@macky
I am always had Intel CPU's. I guess it is just a preference.
@clocker
Yea I don't mind building from a used machine. He doesn't need anything fancy and he is currently retired so that is why I need to keep it somewhat cheap. He gave me 2 old PC's of his, pretty old ones. None of them even have DVD burners and one had a DVD ROM drive and both probably have AGP slots and stereo sound cards. I can reuse the cases even if they are retro. He won't care about that though. My old 7900GT is more than enough for his needs as would be the 550w power supply.
@Skiz
Didn't think about Craigslist. I will check that out, thanks.
Your 7900GT is a DirectX 9 card, if you are going to use Win7 as the OS for this build this is the minimum, and in my experience using an older DirectX 9 card results in a 'blocky' desktop with reduced performance compared to even a relatively cheap DirectX 10 card.
I don't mean to rain on your parade this is just my experience, also remember that earlier than 8xxx series NVidia cards don't support PureVideoHD so the newer video codecs are not decoded by the graphics card, which once again will result in reduced performance with video files.