Question:
Is this a good PC build?
anonymous
2012-07-26 11:36:43 UTC
Okay, this will be my first ever PC Build, and I wanted to make sure that the parts I've selected will work well with each other as well as for the purposes of high end video editing with ProShow Producer as well as some relatively strenuous gaming (such as Amnesia, etc.).

Case: Azza Hurrican 2000

Motherboard: ASUS P8Z77-V LX Intel Z77 ATX DDR3 2400 LGA 1155

RAM: Corsair Vengeance 8 GB ( 2 x 4 GB ) DDR3 1600 MHz (PC3 12800) 240-Pin DDR3 Memory Kit for Intel Core i3, i5, i7 and AMD Platforms SDRAM CMZ8GX3M2A1600C9

Processor: Intel Core i5-3570K Quad-Core Processor 3.4 GHz 4 Core LGA 1155 - BX80637I53570K

PSU: Corsair Enthusiast TX V2 Series 750-Watt 80 Plus Bronze Certified High Performance Modular Power Supply CP-9020003-NA

GPU: EVGA GeForce GTX670 FTW 2048MB GDDR5 256bit, Dual Dual-Link DVI, HDMI, DisplayPort, 4-Way SLI Ready Graphics Card Graphics Cards 02G-P4-2678-KR

Drives: SSD: Crucial 128 GB m4 2.5-Inch Solid State Drive SATA 6Gb/s CT128M4SSD2
HDD: Western Digital 1 TB Caviar Blue SATA III 7200 RPM 32 MB Cache Bulk/OEM Desktop Hard Drive - WD10EALX

Aux. Fan: Enermax CPU Cooler ETD-T60-VD

I'd appreciate some feedback and any suggestions you have to optimize the performance while keeping cost reasonable. That being said, i would enjoy any suggestions you may have as to where I can get these parts for the lowest cost while not sacrificing performance.
Three answers:
Johnathan Random
2012-07-26 11:52:39 UTC
It looks good. Fairly high end. For video editing I would say going intel/nvidia is a good idea. If you really need a solid state for opening and processing quickly keep it. i5 is good, i7 is better. I suppose if I was you, and I am speaking without and SSD experience, I would drop the SSD get an i7. If not that you could keep the SSD and drop the 1TB 7200 rpm storage drive to a 1TB 5200 rpm drive. Everyone looks good as it is but you could tweak it a bit.



i7 > i5 = More processing

1 HDD > HDD + SSD = Saving money

1 SSD + 5200 rpm HDD > 1 SSD + HDD 7200 rpm = better idea imo if you are just storing projects on the SSD and pictures and video on the HDD.
S.O.D
2012-07-26 11:42:36 UTC
DONT GET AN SSD THEY ARE ****

get a normal harddrive, just because its solid doesnt mean its good, its good in the way its nearly impossible for your memory be corrupted but it dont last long and tehere ****

get a normal hardrive there cheaper and last longer, plus its not like laptops get corrupted often, so yeh 1 terrabyte would do if your a serious gamer, plus

the rest is fine just the hardrive, i7 processor would be better but if you cant afford it i5 is good enough
donaldson
2016-10-14 05:15:08 UTC
Yeah you overlooked the OS. i might swap the Seagate rigidity for a WD rigidity. that's only me although; I dislike Seagate. Maxxtor is a branch of Seagate now. in any case, it somewhat is a reasonably solid setup. save your new CPU cooler. production unit heatsinks artwork, yet are not too solid once you would be overclocking. you ought to use any OS, although i might advise Vista in case you opt for to apply DX10. Vista isn't a nasty OS, you in basic terms would desire to run some courses as administrator (there's a checkbox on software residences) to get it to no longer lag. 2gb of RAM is okay, 3gb may be nicer (ensure you get the comparable type and comparable specs. Do 2x1gb and 2x512mb). in case you propose on going above 4gb RAM, get a 64bit OS like Vista x64 or XP professional x64. For some reason although, i'm thinking you may get that cost down. i do no longer know what to alter to do it although. It only looks extreme to me. have you ever priced out a distinctive type of RAM, or is that the main inexpensive?


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