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PSU: All the pain money can buy
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2012-09-04, 07:48 PM | [Ignore Me] #1 | ||
Corporal
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Hello, all. I am constructing a new gaming PC by hand-picking parts and not buying a pre-built rig. I have compiled a list of parts that I currently plan on purchasing:
*Nvidia Geforce GTX 550 Ti *1 500GB HDD Corsair Obsidian Series 650D case ASRock Z77 MoBo Intel Core i5-3570K Ivy Bridge 3.4GHz CORSAIR Enthusiast Series TX650 V2 650W power supply G.SKILL Ripjaws X Series 8GB RAM Seagate Barracuda 1TB HDD (*Carrying over from current rig) Total cost: $732.94, well within my range So, is the combined price worth it (i.e. would it be more beneficial to get a pre-built PC like this one or this one)? I've done quite a bit of research myself, but I have doubts. If there's a cheaper alternative that will still get me the power I'm looking for, then I'm all for it. I'd love to hear your thoughts/opinions on my current selection.
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2012-09-04, 08:32 PM | [Ignore Me] #2 | ||
Looks good over all. Only part I would change is the ram to this. You won't really see any benefit from having such high clocked ram. That 550 Ti will be able to hold its own till you get a new video card too.
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SS89Goku - NC - BR33 - CR5||LFO? Want help upgrading/building a new computer? Will your desktop/laptop run PS2? How PhysX runs on Nvidia and AMD (ATI) systems PlanetSide Universe Rules |
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2012-09-04, 08:51 PM | [Ignore Me] #3 | ||
Colonel
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Mobo: I'd bring it down to the Z75 Pro3. I'm pretty sure all you lose is SSD caching (using an SSD as the cache for your HDD instead of as a separate drive, I doubt you'll miss it).
I'd change the PSU to a different brand, with a lower capacity (500-550w, let me know if you need suggestions). The only other questions would be what you want vs what you need. Do you need the additional HDD space? Otherwise you could get a nice 128GB SSD for $10 more (the $10 you saved on the mobo). Same with the case. Are you getting it because you like it and want to splash out (cases being able to house multiple rigs over the years)? If so, that's cool, but it's way beyond what you need if necessity is all you're concerned with. Last edited by Vancha; 2012-09-04 at 09:12 PM. |
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2012-09-05, 10:55 AM | [Ignore Me] #4 | ||
I think SSD caching is pretty cool and I think it helps a lot in PS2 given the terrain streaming. Plus it's a no-pain upgrade you can do in the future. Just get the SSD and plug it in then turn on the feature. Of course you don't need Intel's solution to do it and I'm not familiar with its advantages/disadvantages compared to one of the systems you can buy.
If you're in budget just fine that $10 bumps you up to a better part...which may just be worth it on its own.
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2012-09-05, 12:51 PM | [Ignore Me] #6 | ||
And what do I have to uninstall to do so?
Caching is seamless and continuously adaptable to usage habits. It's a brilliant feature if you don't want to compromise usability.
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2012-09-05, 01:14 PM | [Ignore Me] #7 | ||
Colonel
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Nothing. It's not your drive?
You say it yourself, caching has to adapt, things that aren't in the cache are slow. That's not seamless. Why bother with it now that 128GB/256GB SSDs are the norm? No one needs a cache that size. |
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2012-09-05, 02:27 PM | [Ignore Me] #8 | ||
That question is obviously rhetorical: I've got full terabyte disks. If I've got a 128gb for boot I've got to continually shuffle things around. Because, if I don't put it on the SSD, what was the point in the first place?
I can deal with Skyrim or my old Borderlands install booting up "slow" the first time when I leave it alone for months or a year. But downloading it again? That's hours. The cache is absolutely seamless. There's no management involved. In fact, it can speed up a greater number of programs per size, because it doesn't need to put the whole thing on it. Half a tb is about what I'd need right now. Shelling out $400 for that, yeah right.
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All opinions are not equal. Some are a very great deal more robust, sophisticated and well supported in logic and argument than others. |
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2012-09-05, 03:10 PM | [Ignore Me] #9 | |||
Colonel
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Isn't booting up "slow" the first time a seam? I think I'd definitely consider a noticeable drop in performance a seam. As for your needs, maybe they aren't everyone's needs. |
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2012-09-05, 03:54 PM | [Ignore Me] #10 | |||
Corporal
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What PSUs would you recommend? Thanks, Goku, for the RAM suggestion. That's saved me a few bucks. Edit: The cheapest 500GB HDD I can find that has a decent review is only $10 less than the 1 TB HDD. Doesn't seem worth it to cut the capacity in half for a mere $10.
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The debate is over. Last edited by DownloadFailed; 2012-09-05 at 04:03 PM. |
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2012-09-05, 04:04 PM | [Ignore Me] #11 | ||
Colonel
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You might as well get a cache if you don't fancy an SSD. Either way it'll be one of the most noticeable differences you can make. It's the "going black" of the computer hardware (alongside 120hz monitors).
From cheapest to most expensive (all have free shipping)... PC P&C Silencer MK III 500w 80+ Bronze (MIR) Seasonic M12II 520w 80+ Bronze Rosewill Capstone 550w 80+ Gold They're all modular too, so you avoid the cabling mess. Last edited by Vancha; 2012-09-05 at 04:05 PM. |
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2012-09-05, 04:30 PM | [Ignore Me] #12 | |||
Corporal
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2012-09-05, 06:06 PM | [Ignore Me] #13 | |||
As far as PSUs I think it's a good idea to go as efficient (80+ bronze<silver<gold<platinum) as you can at the right wattage and budget. You save money in electricity (though it is fairly small) and the system should be cooler and quieter.
But it doesn't matter much, you're fine with any of them. Modular cabling is great if you're likely to fiddle with the inside bits or care about interior aesthetics. A decent case will last you forever. ATX has swatted down challengers before and it's not likely, in the medium-term, that videocards are going to get bigger or that the heat output will get much greater either.
Ah, I see the problem, you don't know shit about what I've got on my computer, or playing willing ignorance. FFS, you're smarter than this. Games and other programs plus files I want accelerated reach 300+ gb easily. And I don't even have that much stuff...something like BF3 is 25gb. It's, foremost, a question of efficiency. I can get a tb HD and a cache for the price of the insufficient 256gb SSD. Reap most of the benefit with everything you've got and no fiddling compared to prioritization and active storage maintenance. Be pedantic with "seamless", if you want.
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All opinions are not equal. Some are a very great deal more robust, sophisticated and well supported in logic and argument than others. |
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2012-09-05, 08:25 PM | [Ignore Me] #14 | ||
Colonel
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Yeah, I was being cheeky. I think we just have different priorities. I like reliability and consistency - not opening up X in a few months and wondering why it's going so slowly. I'd rather shift around the games I'm playing at the time to a dedicated drive and know it'll be consistently fast and I'd rather things I'll only do once be fast (moving files, compressing/extracting, installing etc.)
The fact that an SSD cache will only speed up frequently used programs and the fact that it does it's own thing, as opposed to a dedicated SSD which does what you want, when you want, means I can't recommend it over an independent SSD to someone who'd need to ask. Having said that, I realize no one asked, so whatever. And yeah, I have to be pedantic, sorry. I'd be pissed if I was told something was seamless (i.e. expecting an SSD cache to make my HDD perform identically to an SSD), and ended up discovering it wasn't. It wouldn't matter if it was just us arguing crap, but when it could decide how someone spends a decent amount of their money... Last edited by Vancha; 2012-09-05 at 08:35 PM. |
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