fast ram (g.skill sniper 2133) on sale, 8gb for $59.99: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produ...-na-_-na&cm_sp=&AID=10446076&PID=7034161&SID=
GAF, help me choose between two cases please:
Zalman Z3 Plus: http://www.zalman.com/global/product/Product_Read.php?Idx=821
Deep Cool Tesseract SW: http://www.deepcool.com/product/case/2014-05/9_840.shtml
I can get either for around $50, inc. tax..
Just the thread I was looking for.
I'm looking at getting a gaming PC capable of running the majority of games at a high setting and hopefully it would last me a couple of years. How's this one looking so far? I haven't bothered looking at thermal compounds or anything, I just mean in terms of the RAM, Video Card, CPU etc, is it good enough? I want to be able to play games like BF4 on ultra settings with a good frame rate and hopefully the newer releases for the next couple of years. http://uk.pcpartpicker.com/p/7RYcVn
To be honest, I'm going to get it pre-built from an online store. I've had a look and the price is pretty much comparable except I'd be paying about £100 more for one that's pre-built, but then that would also come with the thermal paste, optical drive etc which I haven't factored in on that parts checker site and I'd get a 6 year warranty with it which is appealing for a noob like me. Overclocking is a no and I'm not too fussy when it comes to things like compactness. I'm more focused on the performance truth be told, would a PC with those components be good for say the next 4 years or so? It'll be used for gaming only, not video editing or anything else.H81 is an older motherboard platform - technically it'll work, but it may need a BIOS update to be compatible with the latest processors, which includes the 4690K. It's better to stick with newer H97/Z97 motherboards which will work out of the box with the 4690K for sure.
Also, you chose a small mATX model motherboard. It'll fit in the case, but you can either go with a smaller case (more compact computer), or go with a larger motherboard to match the case (more expandability for the future).
Ideally you'd want to go with 2 x 4GB RAM for dual channel mode, but a single stick running in single channel won't make that much of a difference.
Other than that, things look fine, but I have a few questions. Will you be overclocking? Do you want a more compact computer?
To be honest, I'm going to get it pre-built from an online store. I've had a look and the price is pretty much comparable except I'd be paying about £100 more for one that's pre-built, but then that would also come with the thermal paste, optical drive etc which I haven't factored in on that parts checker site and I'd get a 6 year warranty with it which is appealing for a noob like me. Overclocking is a no and I'm not too fussy when it comes to things like compactness. I'm more focused on the performance truth be told, would a PC with those components be good for say the next 4 years or so? It'll be used for gaming only, not video editing or anything else.
http://www.ukgamingcomputers.co.uk/morpheus-i5-custom-gaming-pc-p-167.html From there, and then I'll be changing the video card etc to match the ones I have listed on the parts checker site. I don't mind paying that bit extra if it comes assembled and everything with a 6 year warranty.What store is it? Are you also buying all the parts from that same store? I was wondering because there are other retailers and parts you can go with to save a bit of money. For example, for just 1 more, you can get much better RAM.
http://uk.pcpartpicker.com/part/gskill-memory-f317000cl11d8gbxl
I'd also recommend a heatsink like this one to better cool the CPU instead of the stock heatsink, even if you aren't overclocking.
http://uk.pcpartpicker.com/part/cooler-master-cpu-cooler-rr212e20pkr2
How much are they charging for assembly? If they say they will do systems checking for you when they assemble it, then it'll be alright to keep that H81 motherboard, they should update the BIOS and ensure that it works for you.
Thermal paste comes with every Intel processor. it's preapplied to the cooler in the box. Lots of heatsinks come with a packet or tube of thermal paste in the packaging, sometimes even preapplied for you.
Performance wise, those parts are fine. If you don't mind overclocking, it'll be slightly more expensive but you could get an extra year or two out of the machine. If not, then you could go with a non-K processor and maybe save a bit of money. Many motherboards make it easy to overclock, you literally click on a setting and it'll automatically overclock for you with safe settings.
Manual overclocking gives you more performance, but is more involved.
http://www.ukgamingcomputers.co.uk/morpheus-i5-custom-gaming-pc-p-167.html From there, and then I'll be changing the video card etc to match the ones I have listed on the parts checker site. I don't mind paying that bit extra if it comes assembled and everything with a 6 year warranty.
Yeah, I suck at Maths haha. Ok that's awesome, I'll go ahead with the order then. Are there any games that a PC with those specs would struggle to run? I'm hoping it'll last me sort of 4-6 years.You mentioned a £100 difference, I don't see where it is. The parts you chose on PCPartPicker add up to £682, after 20% VAT it'll be £817.
On the UKGC website, if I set the parts to match the ones you have on the PCPartPicker list then it's £835 including taxes, but not including £16 for shipping.
The difference seems to only be £33. For a six year warranty, I say it's worth it.
Yeah, I suck at Maths haha. Ok that's awesome, I'll go ahead with the order then. Are there any games that a PC with those specs would struggle to run? I'm hoping it'll last me sort of 4-6 years.
Wait, is VAT normally included in prices? I'm Canadian, taxes in North America usually aren't included in price listings. It seems that parts already include VAT, although I'm not sure.
So when is the next big processor update going to happen?
I guess next year, but will it be just minor speed bumps or something big?
I'm on a 3770k and totally hapy at the moment, just wondering when I should expect to upgrade...
Question!
I have had my laptop listed online for a few weeks now, and I found a guy who is looking to go the opposite way of me - go from Desktop to laptop. He has a pretty nice rig that he's offered to trade:
- i7-4770k
- EVGA GTX 770
- MSI Z87-g45 mobo
- RAIDMAX Vampire case
- 16 GB RAM (not sure on brand, but it looks like 2x8GB)
- Cooler Master 800W 80+ gold PSU
- Water cooled (Corsiar brand, not sure which)
- 500 GB HD, 300 GB HD
I'd be trading my Lenovo Y500 w/2x GT 750m and 1TB HD. I feel like it's a pretty fair trade, but what do you guys think about the PC? It SHOULD be plug and play until I want to upgrade the GPU and HD.
How much were you selling the laptop for?
So when is the next big processor update going to happen?
I guess next year, but will it be just minor speed bumps or something big?
I'm on a 3770k and totally hapy at the moment, just wondering when I should expect to upgrade...
Question!
I have had my laptop listed online for a few weeks now, and I found a guy who is looking to go the opposite way of me - go from Desktop to laptop. He has a pretty nice rig that he's offered to trade:
- i7-4770k
- EVGA GTX 770
- MSI Z87-g45 mobo
- RAIDMAX Vampire case
- 16 GB RAM (not sure on brand, but it looks like 2x8GB)
- Cooler Master 800W 80+ gold PSU
- Water cooled (Corsiar brand, not sure which)
- 500 GB HD, 300 GB HD
I'd be trading my Lenovo Y500 w/2x GT 750m and 1TB HD. I feel like it's a pretty fair trade, but what do you guys think about the PC? It SHOULD be plug and play until I want to upgrade the GPU and HD.
NoRéN;143592532 said:MSI 970 gaming.
I had not run anything demanding on it so I had not noticed it until yesterday when i, well, can't recall what it was actually. Anyway, Directv updated so the receiver turned off and with the extra quiet that's when i heard it.
Middle of next year, we're supposed to get new unlocked Broadwell processors for socket 1150 and a completely new platform which is locked Skylake processors on socket 1151 motherboard (incompatible with socket 1150).
Specifics are unknown yet, but if Broadwell is in line with prior Intel generations, expect a minor difference, maybe 10-20% improvement at best. No idea about Skylake.
If you're happy right now, you could go for socket 1151, and wait for whatever the next line of processors after Skylake is (sometime in 2016, probably).
How much were you selling the laptop for?
I have the same cpu and I am waiting for ddr4 before upgrading. That cpu won't be a bottle neck anyime soon.
Was thinking of grabbing a G-Sync monitor after Christmas. Most of my games float between 30 - 60+ fps and (correct me if I'm wrong) I'll benefit in input lag and tearing for that fluctuating framerate.
In Australia I basically have two options;
1) ASUS PG278Q 27" 2560 x 1440 - $979
2) AOC G2460PG 24" 1920x1080 - $528
I want to go with the latter, but I'm unfamiliar with AOC. Anyone had any experience with their displays?
If anything I'd say you are getting the better end of this deal based on what you were selling it for. Seems like a fair enough trade though and you're both getting a good machine for what you want. I'd probably do it.
Ok. So. I think I might want to upgrade to windows 8 from 7 finally. What's the best way to do that currently? Cheapest way possible too lol.
Also is that recommended?
Ok. So. I think I might want to upgrade to windows 8 from 7 finally. What's the best way to do that currently? Cheapest way possible too lol.
Also is that recommended?
$700 seemed fair.
Check the Buy Sell Trade thread.
Check out reddit's microsoftsoftwareswap ($20 or less) or the BST thread as threetri333 mentioned.
The keys from microsoftsoftwareswap are legitimate and unique keys - I think they're from educational programs like dreamspark and technet, which are for university students. Technically those people are breaking some EULA or licensing agreement by selling them, but there's no way to track unique keys being sold or not, so there's little chance if at all that they'll deactivate or invalidate Windows keys.
As for the procedure, backup and clean install is best.
A comparably spec'd brand new system would cost a lot more than $700. Small hard drives, but you're getting a decent system that can be upgraded in the future, so it looks good.
If all the parts are in good order, then go for it.
Just ordered two Intel 730 240GB Drives.
Time to raid 0 these things.
I've never raided before. These are being added to a system that already has a SSD with the OS already on it. These will be used as my gaming storage. Is it pretty easy to make these 2 drives raided while the rest aren't?
Heres a start point
PCPartPicker part list / Price breakdown by merchant
CPU: Intel Core i7-4790K 4.0GHz Quad-Core OEM/Tray Processor (£259.73 @ Overclockers.co.uk)
CPU Cooler: Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO 82.9 CFM Sleeve Bearing CPU Cooler (£24.85 @ Scan.co.uk)
Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-Z97MX-Gaming 5 Micro ATX LGA1150 Motherboard (£107.00 @ Ebuyer)
Memory: Kingston Fury White Series 8GB (2 x 4GB) DDR3-1866 Memory (£59.98 @ Amazon UK)
Storage: Toshiba 1TB 3.5" 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive (£37.60 @ Aria PC)
Video Card: MSI GeForce GTX 970 4GB Twin Frozr V Video Card (£272.99 @ Ebuyer)
Case: Corsair 350D MicroATX Mid Tower Case (£74.64 @ CCL Computers)
Power Supply: SeaSonic S12G 550W 80+ Gold Certified ATX Power Supply (£73.49 @ Amazon UK)
Monitor: Dell P2414H 60Hz 23.8" Monitor (£178.98 @ Novatech)
Total: £1089.26
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2014-12-16 14:39 GMT+0000
Awesome, thank you so much for the help. I've heard that it's a good idea to have a (relatively small, I guess) SSD to put the OS onto - If I wanted that, how should I adjust the other bits in order to come into the budget? Maybe trying to hit around the £900 mark - would I still be able to play new games at a good resolution and decent framerate etc?
Just ordered two Intel 730 240GB Drives.
Time to raid 0 these things.
I've never raided before. These are being added to a system that already has a SSD with the OS already on it. These will be used as my gaming storage. Is it pretty easy to make these 2 drives raided while the rest aren't?
Honestly, there's absolutely no reason to bother with RAID 0 with SSD's for gaming (or for almost anything else).
Very similar to my build am going for expect with an i5 instead. You could go for an i5-4690k or i5-4570k which will save about £102 and will still be great for your needs. i7 is more for if you do things like streaming/gaming at the same time or lots of video editing but since you only rated it at 2 for video editing waiting a few more minutes shouldn't be much of a dealat least not to justify the price increase from i5 to i7. General gaming performance should be very similar give or take 5fps. You could also look at a cheaper monitor which could save about £20+ based on alternatives and maybe a little less on the power supply.
Will the money saved I would say investing in a small SSD for OS would be a great idea something like a Crucial MX100 120GB for like £52.
The TP-WDN4800 (IIRC) is pretty good - I have one in my rig.Brilliant, thank you. I'll also need a wireless internet card - are there any that are particularly recommendable?
The TP-WDN4800 (IIRC) is pretty good - I have one in my rig.
Weird, I saw a night and day difference using ssd's for gaming.
To be honest, there's barely a reason to bother with SSDs at all for gaming, let alone RAID 0. It makes very little appreciable difference in loading times that I've seen for the games I currently have installed.
Weird, I saw a night and day difference using ssd's for gaming.
Aye, it has a pretty good reputation on that PC Parts Picker.
So if I were to build this, what sort of capability would it have? Particularly w regards to games and occasional possible streaming:
PCPartPicker part list / Price breakdown by merchant
CPU: Intel Core i5-4690K 3.5GHz Quad-Core Processor (£167.50 @ Amazon UK)
CPU Cooler: Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO 82.9 CFM Sleeve Bearing CPU Cooler (£24.95 @ Scan.co.uk)
Motherboard: Gigabyte GA-Z97MX-Gaming 5 Micro ATX LGA1150 Motherboard (£106.99 @ Ebuyer)
Memory: Kingston Fury White Series 8GB (2 x 4GB) DDR3-1866 Memory (£59.98 @ Amazon UK)
Storage: Crucial MX100 128GB 2.5" Solid State Drive (£52.08 @ Amazon UK)
Storage: Toshiba 1TB 3.5" 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive (£37.60 @ Aria PC)
Video Card: MSI GeForce GTX 970 4GB Twin Frozr V Video Card (£272.99 @ Ebuyer)
Case: Corsair 350D MicroATX Mid Tower Case (£74.64 @ CCL Computers)
Power Supply: SeaSonic S12G 550W 80+ Gold Certified ATX Power Supply (£73.49 @ Amazon UK)
Wireless Network Adapter: TP-Link TL-WDN4800 802.11a/b/g/n PCI-Express x1 Wi-Fi Adapter (£26.39 @ Aria PC)
Total: £896.61
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2014-12-17 21:17 GMT+0000
Just IMO but using an SSD for Windows but keeping the games on a separate HDD makes a pretty big difference in terms of stability and multi-tasking. I'm the type who keeps Chrome/Spotify/etc. open while I play games, though, so maybe I'm a bit of an outlier. But I find that having an SSD with all my apps and programs keeps my games much more stable. Otherwise, having everything run off the same HDD makes my system feel a LOT more clunky, for lack of a better word. It's just something I "feel" and can't really quantify, tbh.
What's my best option for internet if the router is two rooms (15-25 feet) away. I don't want to run a cable through the ceiling >__>
What's my best option for internet if the router is two rooms (15-25 feet) away. I don't want to run a cable through the ceiling >__>
So would something like this cover my needs?Powerline adapters, assuming your house/apartment/whatever has decent wiring.
Honestly though I game on WiFi and its really not nearly as big of a deal as people like to make it out to be. Sure, wired is preferable (and I wouldn't game competitively, like MLG level or whatever, on WiFi) but its really not bad at all.
What the hell is this magic?Probably a powerline ethernet adapter kit.
There's a bunch out there. I don't have any first hand experience with them though I know there are some folks who have.
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produ...cription=powerline+networking&N=-1&isNodeId=1
Though if it's a house and you own it, I'd take the time to wire it properly.
It's possible I just haven't played any games that have benefited from an SSD yet. What games have you noticed a difference in?