- Jul 26, 2012
 
- 74
 
- 2
 
- 66
 
my bad you mean solid state drive i assume. didnt go for one as they are quite pricey for small storage drives
			
			That's true, but quality and features come into play when you start upgrading parts or even upgrading everything inside. A good case can last over several builds, and while that's possible for a noname plastic case as well, the chances for that are lower. You're more likely to run into problems with a low quality case when upgrading.it has its own front fans but surely its just a box for the conponents and wont make that much difference
Yeah, meant a Solid State Drive. But they're not storage drives... they're performance drives. You only need to fit your OS and the main programs on it to get a huge boost to responsiveness and "snappiness". Things just happen with much less delay than from a HDD install. If you don't have a set budget, you should definitely consider a 60GB/64GB SSD. It'd be useful for interacting with resource-heavy audio and video conversion/editing toolsmy bad you mean solid state drive i assume. didnt go for one as they are quite pricey for small storage drives
It seems like you can make minor adjustments to the base clock of an unlocked CPU and boost frequency of a locked CPU. In any case the range of possible multipliers will be very limitedjust reading through the mobo manual and the bios gives the option for overclocking.
