Originally posted by: dBTelos
Atheus, do you mean that 2GB sticks are slower then 1GB sticks?
Originally posted by: Miklebud
He's closeminded, yes. And would have no idea how to read a benchmark of a CPU comparison... He wanted AMD, he got AMD. His choice, not mine. He's been a close friend for 16+ years, so I couldnt just leave him to do this on his own. 4GB vs. 2GB, these are all 1GB Sticks, so performance shouldnt be a problem. He's been on a Radeon 9800/AXP Rig for the past 3 years, anything is an upgrade for him.
And the monitor and case were included in the $3000 price, so keep that in mind.
And any comments on credit are not necessary, he will pay it off in about a week.
So you did send him to Dell. Good thinking. I would have also. Self-built PC's are for the people who actually built them to use, IMO.Originally posted by: Miklebud
And the monitor and case were included in the $3000 price, so keep that in mind.
Originally posted by: trueimage
some of those choices one the purchased system were dumb
why not 2x 74 raptors in raid 0
why two dvd burners? what does that have to do with gaming
a $1500 o/c'd c2d system would beat that
waste of cash (or debt)
Originally posted by: alpha88
Tell him to spend less, or just take a huge cut.
AM2 X2: ~300 bucks
AM2 SLi mobo: ~170
400 GB Seagate: ~120
Seasonic PSU: ~120
2x2GB DDR2: ~500
2x 7900GTO: ~500 (I'd get the GTOs from eVGA and then step up to 8800s soonish)
Looks like about $1500
Ah, but SATA-II drives do not necessarily support a throughput of 3.0Gb/s. Also, SATA drives current allow a max bandwidth of 1.5Gb/s (187.5MB/s).Originally posted by: ryan256
Originally posted by: trueimage
some of those choices one the purchased system were dumb
why not 2x 74 raptors in raid 0
why two dvd burners? what does that have to do with gaming
a $1500 o/c'd c2d system would beat that
waste of cash (or debt)
Well.... I didn't choose raptors for my system because they don't support SATAII interface atm. Their only advantage is seek times. And since I often work with large video files data throughput is more important than seek time to me.
Originally posted by: Howard
Ah, but SATA-II drives do not necessarily support a throughput of 3.0Gb/s. Also, SATA drives current allow a max bandwidth of 1.5Gb/s (187.5MB/s).
Sequential transfer rate peaks at ~88MB/s for the WD1500ADFD Raptor: http://www.storagereview.com/articles/200601/WD1500ADFD_3.html
If SATA never really hits 1.5Gb/s how did they measure the transfer rate of the drive?Originally posted by: ryan256
Originally posted by: Howard
Ah, but SATA-II drives do not necessarily support a throughput of 3.0Gb/s. Also, SATA drives current allow a max bandwidth of 1.5Gb/s (187.5MB/s).
Sequential transfer rate peaks at ~88MB/s for the WD1500ADFD Raptor: http://www.storagereview.com/articles/200601/WD1500ADFD_3.html
True. Its not a full 3Gb/s, but it is higher than the SATA bandwidth since SATA never really hits 1.5Gb/s either.
Originally posted by: krotchy
Originally posted by: alpha88
Tell him to spend less, or just take a huge cut.
AM2 X2: ~300 bucks
AM2 SLi mobo: ~170
400 GB Seagate: ~120
Seasonic PSU: ~120
2x2GB DDR2: ~500
2x 7900GTO: ~500 (I'd get the GTOs from eVGA and then step up to 8800s soonish)
Looks like about $1500
Why on earth go AMD if hes got a 3k budget? Amd is the budget performance sector now, with Core 2 for the high end. 3k is definitely high end.
My suggestions:
Asus P5W Intel 975X Mobo with Wi-fi (250)
Core 2 Duo E6700 (550) (Or X6800 if he feels the need to near double price for moderate gains)
Wait couple of weeks and get an Nvidia 8800GTX when they come out (600)
2 GB DDR2-800 (350-400) (Corsair is my choice here)
Seagate 7200.10 320GB SATA drive(s) (95 Dollars). You could do 2-4 in a raid 0 for faster booting if your inclined
40 dollars for any Dual Layer DVD Burner (NEC/Plextor/SAmsung) or if your gutsy get a plextor SATA one for 100 bucks to remove cabling
Lian-Li PC-101B case (180)
Seasonic M12 600W power supply - (170)
2290 total. Throw in a Dell 2407 WFP and you are at about 3k on the nose for a dominant system.
Originally posted by: fire400
Originally posted by: krotchy
Originally posted by: alpha88
Tell him to spend less, or just take a huge cut.
AM2 X2: ~300 bucks
AM2 SLi mobo: ~170
400 GB Seagate: ~120
Seasonic PSU: ~120
2x2GB DDR2: ~500
2x 7900GTO: ~500 (I'd get the GTOs from eVGA and then step up to 8800s soonish)
Looks like about $1500
Why on earth go AMD if hes got a 3k budget? Amd is the budget performance sector now, with Core 2 for the high end. 3k is definitely high end.
My suggestions:
Asus P5W Intel 975X Mobo with Wi-fi (250)
Core 2 Duo E6700 (550) (Or X6800 if he feels the need to near double price for moderate gains)
Wait couple of weeks and get an Nvidia 8800GTX when they come out (600)
2 GB DDR2-800 (350-400) (Corsair is my choice here)
Seagate 7200.10 320GB SATA drive(s) (95 Dollars). You could do 2-4 in a raid 0 for faster booting if your inclined
40 dollars for any Dual Layer DVD Burner (NEC/Plextor/SAmsung) or if your gutsy get a plextor SATA one for 100 bucks to remove cabling
Lian-Li PC-101B case (180)
Seasonic M12 600W power supply - (170)
2290 total. Throw in a Dell 2407 WFP and you are at about 3k on the nose for a dominant system.
interesting, took 'till the second page 'till someone came up with a reasonable enough post for one of the Intel Extreme CPU's with a nice power setup.
yeah, visual I'd say is optional.
OS - I'd also go WinXP Pro x32 and x64 and Vista on triple boot option, that's just me though. to provide the flexibility of gaming for a system that already cost that much.
Originally posted by: Howard
If SATA never really hits 1.5Gb/s how did they measure the transfer rate of the drive?Originally posted by: ryan256
Originally posted by: Howard
Ah, but SATA-II drives do not necessarily support a throughput of 3.0Gb/s. Also, SATA drives current allow a max bandwidth of 1.5Gb/s (187.5MB/s).
Sequential transfer rate peaks at ~88MB/s for the WD1500ADFD Raptor: http://www.storagereview.com/articles/200601/WD1500ADFD_3.html
True. Its not a full 3Gb/s, but it is higher than the SATA bandwidth since SATA never really hits 1.5Gb/s either.
