2x Watt Mini
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Can you rate my gaming rig?
I would like to know people's views and opinions about my gaming pc which is now complete.
I've started building last year in the summer but bought all the parts not as once because I wanted to wait for a while until price drop downs and safe money.
Here is my gaming rig's build:
Antec Mini P180 Case
Asus Maximus Gene 2 Motherboard
Intel Core 2 Quad Extreme QX9770 3.2Ghz 1600FSB
Corsair H50 Hydro Series Liquid CPU Cooler
Corsair Dominator 8GB DDR2 RAM (4x 2GB pairs running at 1066MHz each)
2x Red LED Antec 120mm fans
Nvidia Geforce 9800GX2
Zalman RAM Cooler (Blue)
2x Samsung 250GB Hard Drives @ 7200prm (RAID 0)
Samsung 300GB Hard Drive @ 7200 (No RAID)
Samsung DVD Burner Drive
ZALMAN 620 Watt Power Supply
Microsoft Windows 7 Professional (64-Bit)
Upgrade Plan:
Alphacool LCD-Display 240x128 - Black
please rate my gaming rig, as I really want to know what other people think and also whether my pc is future proof or not.
Thanks
I have a lot of questions...
- What's with the CPU? Couldn't you get an i5, i7, or Phenom for less $ with more power? Super high-end quad core CPUs are good for digital content creation and video editing, but have *very* little impact on game performance. In most games there is almost no difference between my Athlon II x4 and a Core i7 at the same clock speeds (< 10%) so don't throw away too much money here. I bought my Athlon for $70.
- Is $80 for a CPU cooler necessary? I spent $20 on an extruded aluminum cooler for my overclocked (3.2GHz) quad core and under full load it doesn't even exceed 45°C.
- 8GB RAM is overkill; start with 4GB and add another 4GB later if it's not enough (it will be). In many motherboards using 4 sticks of RAM cripples your overclock potential due to extra strain on the memory controller too.
- 9800GX2 is old technology, runs hot & loud, and draws way too much power. If you're reusing this from another computer then it's all good, but I wouldn't buy one now. The Radeon 5770 offers fantastic performance for the buck and is more than powerful enough for a single-card solution, and best of all, takes only 9 watts of power idling and 110 watts at full load. The GTX 280 takes 45 watts idling and 226 watts at load, as a comparison (the power savings will save you literally hundreds of dollars in energy bills after three years)
- RAM cooler is unnecessary; DDR2 barely gets warm with the RAM heatsinks alone
- Don't use three separate hard drives because it's just three times more likely that one of those drives is going to fail and take all your data with it. If you want to organize your files across three drives, then buy one larger, fast drive (1TB Western Digital Black, 92MB/s average read speed) and partition it into three separate partitions. A RAID 0 will give you slightly faster read speeds, closer to 130-140MB/s, but I've run a RAID 0 before and I didn't notice any significant difference in any of my games -- and if one of the two drives in the RAID dies then the whole array is broken. Samsung hard drives are quite good, but the Black has two years more warranty and faster read speeds. SSDs cost at least four times more money for the same storage capacity... I'd wait for the price to go down before I could actually recommend buying one. If you wanted, you could also get an external HDD to back up files to in case your hard drive -does- crap out on you.
- I've never even heard of Zalman making power supplies. Does it have Japanese capacitors inside? Definitely look online and find out, because you absolutely do not want cheap Chinese caps in there like most manufacturers use. Corsair power supplies (450w and up) use all Japanese caps and are extremely reliable. I'd recommend looking at them instead if the Zalman doesn't. 500w is really more than enough power here too, but if you wanted some upgrade headroom, 550-620w wouldn't be unreasonable. Run a google search for "psu calc" and you can calculate your recommended PSU.
Remember, a computer is just a metal box with a bunch of stuff inside of it. It's great to have a new, fast system and all, but don't forget that three years down the road this system will only be worth half of what you spent on it. Try to get hardware that's good, but don't overspend on a bunch of stuff that you're never *really* going to need in order to get the most out of your investment.
I spent $600 on my gaming rig and it looks real sexy with LED display fan controllers and blue fans and UV-reactive cable sleeving and all, runs my games at 30+ fps, but best of all, I know it'll be going for years to come without putting a single dollar into it. The parts are also very energy efficient. If you leave your PC on 24/7 and you're using that 9800GX2, you'll be pulling 60 watts more than my computer does at idle, which equals out to almost $100 a year in extra energy costs. High-end hardware carries hidden costs, and so does future-proofing (also known as "buying overpriced junk now that will go down to what it should have cost six months later").


US $.99
























