![]() |
Buying a new PC: It's a nightmare
It come time to buy a new PC and I have £1000 ready to spend.
However, I have no idea where to start! :o Is £1000 even a reasonable budget or do I need to stretch to more? How on earth do I know if I am getting my money's worth when I know little about how much things are worth and I don't know where I can get independent advice? I have made my own PCs back in the late 90s and would be happy to do this again, but I have no idea what the best set of components to buy might be. Does anyone have any advice? |
Well first thing is what your trying to build? Gaming rig? and if so how powerful. 1000 pounds should, I think, be plenty sufficient to build a good system.
As for where to start, start digging around sites that offer built computers of the kind your looking for, then see what components they are using (or poke around the threads here for builds). Then start researching components, like video cards, motherboards, cpus, etc. Look for reviews and customer feedback (like say newegg.com). Also ask questions here about parts your interested in. When you have narrowed your build down you could ask for comments on it from us on it as a whole. That or just buy from Dell or the like. XPS is their gaming rigs (or Alienware but I don't like them as you pay through the nose for the name) |
How much is L1000 worth in real money Letum ? :har:
Is it like that Canadian Monopoly money ? :rotfl::har::rotfl: |
Thanks Neon, Yup, it's a gaming rig.
Looks like I had better start doing my homework. I'll come back when I have some ideas. Firewall: what are you on? |
Look for processor and mobo packages. Once decided, the rest falls into place.
|
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16813128384
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16819103471 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16820145182 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16814130339 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16811129021 http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16817139005 Add a Seagate hard drive (16MB cache) and a DVDROM W/R and you're off to the races. I'm considering this configuration for myself. Already have the video card and its excellent. Happy Shopping!!! :yeah: EDIT: I've used this case/Power Supply combination for a couple customers and it works great. Customers are very happy with how well the case keeps their systems cool. I don't recommend it for dual video card (SLI) setups though as the 2nd card sits too close to the power supply for my liking... Then again--I don't believe in dual video card setups when a single 9800GT(X) cranks out high frame-rates by itself. |
Just j\king with ya Letum. :DL With $2,000.00 you can build a good rig.
If in US I'd point you towards TigerDirect. As your in the UK I assume you have someone simular there. As stated by AVG bundle setups cpu\mobo , psu\ vid cards are good deals to look into. IMHO buy brand name recognized hardware and look carefully at the Warranties. |
Quote:
TigerDirect and Newegg are great sites for parts and deals. I generally get all hard-drives from Tiger because they package them better than newegg. FYI--I do this for a living but I won't charge you for advice :03:! |
I rarely use NewEgg as there right down the road and I have to pay sales tax and shipping.
With TG no sales tax and free shipping over $100.00ish |
Quote:
I can't think of better reasoning than that! :up: |
I like Asus mobo's and I hear people like Gigabyte too. I imagine the nVidia one's have to be pretty decent as well, but I'm no chip-head.
:hmmm: Last I looked I noticed Asus had removed a few chip fans and replaced em with non-mechanical heatsinks. I think one of my chip fans is about to die... the pipe heatsinks might be standard issue now. |
Quote:
I do like the passive cooling of the chipsets as well but there are quite a few companies using that technology now. Those little chipset fans have always been trouble-some and tend to be noisy as well. It's really impressive how much good gear is available at very reasonable prices. I paid more for my C64 than I have to pay for a decent dual core today :hmmm:. |
Way I figure it:
Asus- good after revisions/BIOS updates. They push new tech out the door too quick, might be due to shoddy QA. MSI- best overclockers, excellent BIOS, stable boards Gigabyte- high build quality, good bios, decent/good overclockers, stable Basically; Overclocker? > MSI Full-featured? > Gigabyte (typically most expensive) Budget? > Asus That's how I pick boards for systems, haven't had complaints yet. :up: |
the last ASUS board I had fried itself after 4 short years and I found it quiet unstable, especialy if you do not replace the onboard soundcard for a real soundcard as my biggest crullpit of the BSOD's I had with the old pc was due the onboard soundcard.
now I'm using a ASrock MoBo, and with this new pc which I bought march last year not a single problem so far. HunterICX |
Ever tried updating the BIOS during those 4 years? ;)
Asrock have decent boards, but not really geared towards the enthusiast. They lack the full page of tweakable memory timings, for example (last time I chacked anyway). :D |
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 03:14 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.11
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright © 1995- 2025 Subsim®
"Subsim" is a registered trademark, all rights reserved.