pupil wrote:
Cheers John, I was hoping you'd post as you is our resident PC tinkerer
Re GFX: A poster on ebuyer says of the
Asus HD 4350 512MB: "windows index score in windows 7 ultimate is 5.7 for games and 3.7 on windows aero graphics." Is this going to be enough? TBH, I can live without Windows Aero, I usually turn off all windows visual spangly things when I install a PC as it doesn't interest me. This most graphic intensive thing it will ever need to do is play a Blu-ray. They also have a 1GB version of that card for about 10 quid more, is that worth getting over this one?
The Vram will have little to do with it and tbh? 512mb is actually overkill for the Windows desktop. I have an 8600 GTS 256mb (well actually I confess, I have two) but they are rather nippy as they were originally designed for gaming. One alone was enough to run Aero and Fallout 3.
This site has a 1gb Geforce 240 for £74.99. As for blu ray? don't under rate it. Those low profile cards will not play stutter free HD matierial. I know £74.99 is quite a lot but if you poke around you may find one cheaper. What I would suggest is go for what is considered an entry level gaming card (a cheap one) and go with that. If it's up to any kind of gaming then you can feel safe in the knowledge that it'll power through any mundane tasks.
Infact here you go. A refurb 8600 GTS for about £40 delivered (if this site links to specific items)
http://videocardshop.co.uk/viewproduct. ... -T84G-YDQ3Again I am not saying order that one, but just throwing some ideas out there
pupil wrote:
Re PSU: A BIG factor in my PSU choice is it being silent. This is a music production PC so a everything has to be as silent as possible for when I'm recording. Therefore, the PSUs I'm usually looking at for PC builds are more expensive than your usually gamer PSU, but I'm confident from past experience that Nexus make very solid and power efficient PSUs. DO you know what dB rating that Alienware PSU you linked to has?
I don't sorry. What I do know is that it's 80+ certified. And that is more important IMO than the noise it makes. I do know that it has a 92mm fan in the back and is made by Delta (of server fame). I don't know if the fan speeds up or down but I do know that my system drowns it out any way.
pupil wrote:
Re RAM: I'll read some more reviews, but what I've read so far suggest that OCZ is good. If I get a dud batch, I can always exchange it, so that's not a worry really.
This is very true. I strongly reccomend Scan because their RMA is effortless and painless. Or Ebuyer. I didn't have to RMA with Ebuyer but I ordered at like, 9pm and it arrived the next morning.
pupil wrote:
EDIT: Also, John, you had a good play with a bunch of SSD system drives, didn't you? Can you give me any advice/tips/comments on the SSD I chose based on your experiences?
O.K. *THE* crucial thing (haha pardon the namesake) when buying an SSD is TRIM support. Now I didn't do my homework when I got my Extreme series but I soon learned the error of my ways. I was having to do a secure erase via a linux disc every 6 weeks to keep it zippy. It now supports TRIM but the firmware update for Indilinx is shakey at best, and if it hates your bios you will be doing an RMA.
So find one with TRIM, basically. Now onto the nice part.
Using an SSD is like the old days when you had dial up and went to broadband. It will leave you grinning from ear to ear for months. And, like broadband, once you go there you can't go back. It's actually very painful to. Seriously, booting Windows and being able to launch Firefox instantly is just something that's hard to go back from.
As for particular drives? Well I don't know what size and what you are looking to spend. If it's just a system drive and you're on a budget I strongly suggest this -
http://www.ginger6.com/intel-serial-40g ... m=ShoppingScan are out of stock but you should be able to find it cheaper. It's a 40gb one and my friend in the USA got one. It read at 190mb ps which put my nose out of joint because my Corsair Extreme reads at 210 or so and his was a lot less money. His is also 8gb larger than mine. However, on the write mine doubled his speeds showing where my money had gone. If I had to go back though? I would get the Intel hands down. It comes with a SSD toolkit with it's own TRIM function that you run whenever you feel like it.
Don't worry too much about the size of it. 40gb doesn't sound like much. Windows 7 with some hacking around can be greatly reduced in size. For example there is a file in it called Hiberfil.sys. This file is used for hibernate so you can still put the machine to sleep. It weighs in at around 4gb. Disable system restore (it's useless any way as viruses will infect all of your restore points) and you can get it down by another 4gb or so.I have a 32gb drive that shows as 29gb, my install with lots of apps on (inc photoshop 7 which I now have legally) is 14.8gb free of 29. So I'm using 15gb with every app I run (limewire, alien command center, Avast, Skype, MSN, Nero etc etc).
You can always create a partition on a secondary drive for bloatware but even with the having to hack around I cannot reccomend SSDs enough. They are like going from a single core to quad cores, or dial up to broadband.