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Re: OT: Building A New System
how much does liquid cooling cost?
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Re: OT: Building A New System
That is a good question, probibly several hundred bucks.
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Re: OT: Building A New System
Atrocities
I have been looking at buying this case from Antec. It has a lot of room and good airflow. You could do liquid cooling or support 5 fans for airflow. It also comes with a 430W Power Supply. http://www.newegg.com/app/ViewProduc...129-115&depa=0 Some of the new motherBoards have onboard RAID. The ASUS motherboard I suggested supports RAID 0/1. I would recommend you try to go higher on the P4 if you can until the price gets crazy. Probably no higher than 3.0 or 3.2. Extreme Editions are too expensive. The P4 you get should have a C in the name. This is why: 'C' designator: This letter designator identifies Pentium® 4 processors that support Hyper-Threading Technology † and an 800 MHz front side bus. For example, the Pentium® 4 processor at 2.40C GHz supports an 800 MHz front side bus and Hyper-Threading Technology1. Here is a document to help you understand the 800Mhz bus with DDR memory. http://www.intel.com/design/chipsets/Dual_DDR_SB.pdf Basically to achieve the 800MHz bus you need 2 or 4 identical DDR RAM sticks. The motherboard manual will tell you how to install them for 800MHz configuration. Buying one stick of RAM won't give you the 800MHz bus speed. I recommend that you try to get 2GB of RAM depending on what games you play. Some of the newer games are requiring 500MB of RAM. But recommend 1GB of RAM. I like Seagate HDs. I think the 10,000RPM HD are too expensive for the amount of storage they give you. For you internal HD, use Serial ATA cable for better airflow (smaller cable) and faster data transfer. 2x200GB HD should be fine for video and photo work. I think you should have a DVD Burner and a CDRW/CDR drive. The DVD burner will be great for backups especially with 200GB HDs. Make sure you get a DVD burner that has +/- DVD R and +/- DVD RW so you don't have to worry about which format to get. There was an excellent article in the March 2004 copy of PC World on Quiet your PC. Here is a few of the links they provided: www.quietpc.com and www.siliconacoustics.com If you were to buy a prebuilt system, I would go with Alienware too. Also, good job on the Romulan ship in your STM post. http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/icon7.gif Have you thought about making the Romulan Scimitar? I'm going to bed. [ March 20, 2004, 09:12: Message edited by: hicksz ] |
Re: OT: Building A New System
Be very wary of anything you buy at Fry's... very shady stores.
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Re: OT: Building A New System
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http://www.koolance.com/ go for 240 to 270 dollars. |
Re: OT: Building A New System
A good case is not a case with lot of places for fans. More fans = more noise = not a good idea normally.
There also is a big difference in fan noise, and usually cheaper = more noise. Over here, you can get CPU fans from 10 to 80 € - and you hear the difference. Very much. Same for power supplies. Also check out the latest graphic cards not only for performance, but a few companies (ASUS has started it) are offering cards with more efficient, noise-reduced fans. Up to a few years ago, the graphic card fan usually was the loudest and crappiest, this is not a must any more. ASUS P4C800-E Deluxe has had a lot of failures lately - 2 out of 3 for me, 5 out of 12 I know, and I won't buy another ASUS board for some time. They have started ruining their good reputation some time ago, and now it's really bad. Everything within warranty, but still annoying. Right now, I recommend AMD and EPOX Boards. Stick to the VIA chipsets, though, nForce is still not good. With latest drivers, there are no big problems with VIA now. RAM: Corsair or Kingston (don't know Crucial), expensive but very good. No no-names - too many failures, and memory errors can happen at odd times after some time of perfect service, giving you a hard time to find out what is really wrong with your system. And remember: no Windows XP Home if you want to utilize more than 512 MB RAM. http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/icon12.gif |
Re: OT: Building A New System
Thanks for the insight and info. You would think that MS would have fixed that 512 Ram issue by now.
I guess its back to Win2k for me. http://forum.shrapnelgames.com/images/icons/icon9.gif Better order the SP disks. |
Re: OT: Building A New System
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I only buy from Fry's with a credit card so if the crap fails, I can refuse the charges. The law works well that way. I buy NAME brand stuff only from them now. No cheep chinese crap. |
Re: OT: Building A New System
Just get XP Pro if you want XP... it is not much more expensive than XP Home these days, only a couple of bucks.
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Re: OT: Building A New System
Here is what I would go with for a machine that needed to be stable first, and reasonably fast at the same time.
Intel Pentium 4/ 2.8C GHz 800MHz FSB, 512K Cache, Hyper Threading Technology - Retail Specification Model: Intel Pentium 4 2.8C w/ Hyper Threading Core: Northwood Operating Frequency: 2.8GHz FSB: 800MHz Cache: L1/12K+8K; L2/512K Voltage: 1.525V Process: 0.13Micron Socket: Socket 478 Multimedia Instruction: MMX, SSE, SSE2 Warranty: 3-year MFG Intel 865PE Chipset Motherboard for Intel Socket 478 CPU, Model "D865PERLK" -OEM Specifications: Supported CPU: Socket 478 Intel Pentium 4(HT)/Celeron Processors Chipset: Intel 865PE + ICH5R FSB: 800/533/400MHz RAM: 4x DIMM for DDR400/333/266 Max 4GB IDE: 2x ATA 100 up to 4 Devices Slots: 1x AGP 8X/4X/1X(0.8/1.5V), 5x PCI 2.2 Ports: 2xPS2,1xCOM,1xLPT,1xLAN,8xUSB2.0(Rear 4),3xIEEE1394(Rear 1),RCA/Optical SPDIF Out,Audio Ports Onboard Audio: Analog Devices AD1985 Codec Onboard LAN: Intel 82547EI 10/100/1000Mbps Ethernet Onboard SATA/RAID: 2x Serial ATA, RAID 0/1 Onboard 1394: Agere FW323, 3 Ports Form Factor: ATX 2 sticks of Buffalo Technology 184 Pin 256MB DDR PC-3200 - OEM Specification Manufacturer: Buffalo Technology Speed: DDR400(PC3200) Type: 184 Pin DDR SDRAM Error Checking: Non-ECC Registered/Unbuffered: Unbuffered Cas Latency: 3 Support Voltage: 2.6V Bandwidth: 3.2GB/s Organization: 32M x 64 -Bit Warranty: Lifetime 2 of these Maxtor 160GB 7200RPM IDE Hard Drive, Model 6Y160P0, OEM Drive Only Specifications: Capacity: 160GB Average Seek Time: 9.3 ms Buffer: 8MB Rotational Speed: 7200 RPM Interface: IDE ULTRA ATA133 Features: Maxtor Shock Protection and Data Protection Systems Manufacturer Warranty: 3 years Remark: OEM Drive Only And two of these Western Digital Raptor 36.7GB 10,000RPM SATA Hard Drive, Model WD360GD, OEM Drive Only Specifications: Capacity: 36.7GB Average Seek Time: 5.2 ms Buffer: 8MB Rotational Speed: 10000 RPM Interface: Serial ATA Features: Not specified Manufacturer Warranty: 5 years Remark: OEM Drive Only The other stuff you can buy what ever you can find on sale. This system would not need a lot of air, so almost any case and about 3 fans. Two blowing in and one out, a little positive pressure in the case keeps the readers clean. I like cases with filtered intakes. I would set the system up with a bootable sata mirror on the raptors and use the ide drives in a windows mirror for storage. What I’ve listed here can be had for $845.00 US. If you need a gig of ram, just add another 90 bucks. It would make a right good system, real stable and on the lower edge of fast. But if you want real fast, you have to go with a Hammer http://Groups.msn.com/ThermodynesPlace/fx51244ghz.msnw [ March 21, 2004, 18:29: Message edited by: Thermodyne ] |
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