Hi,
I'm new to building computers, although I have enough technical knowledge and ability that it shouldn't be a huge flop. I want to make a machine capable of playing Starcraft II, doing displays on two monitors, doing some monte carlo particle transport calculations (number crunching, singlethreaded), other kinds of engineering homework, video chat, and browsing the internet.
I'd like to spend under $600 on my system, excluding peripherals+monitors. Since I graduate in about a year and should get a high paying job then, I'd like a system that will hold me over pretty well, but that has a high potential for upgrades, like an SSD, stronger processor, a dedicated graphics card, and more RAM. I would like to use an AMD processor, and I will be buying all of my parts from the US. Also, I'll be downloading Windows 7 Ultimate (64-bit) through MSDN.
I have read several similar threads here already, and I plan to game in 1366 x 768 resolution. I'm going to build the system in May or early June, and I will overclock it. I'm hoping to unlock the 4th core on the processor I've tentatively chosen, but I'll definitely be fine with just 2 or 3 cores.
Are all of the parts I've chosen compatible? I'm especially concerned about the compatibility of the RAM in this build.
Processor:
AMD Athlon II X3 435 Rana 2.9GHz Socket AM3 95W Triple-Core Processor Model ADX435WFGIBOX - $75 on Newegg
Mobo:
ASUS M4A89GTD PRO/USB3 AM3 AMD 890GX SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 HDMI ATX AMD Motherboard - $145 on Newegg
RAM:
Kingston ValueRAM 2GB (2 x 1GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1333 (PC3 10600) Dual Channel Kit Desktop Memory Model KVR1333D3N9K2/2G - 2 at $57 each on Newegg
HDD:
Western Digital WD5001AALS Caviar Black Hard Drive - 500GB, 7200 rpm, 32MB, SATA-3G - $60 on TigerDirect
Case:
C283-1086 :: Cooler Master Centurion 5 - Blue ATX Mid-Tower Case with Front USB, Firewire and Audio Ports (20.61 lbs) - $50 on TigerDirect
PSU:
ULT-LSP750 :: Ultra LSP750 750-Watt Power Supply - ATX, SATA-Ready, SLI-Ready, 135mm Fan, Lifetime Warranty (11 lbs) - $80 on TigerDirect
Total cost so far: $524
Things I will do about a year after the build:
- Add a graphics card
- Upgrade the processor
- Replace the RAM
- Add either a large capacity SSD or a small one and a large HDD
Thanks in advance!
I'm new to building computers, although I have enough technical knowledge and ability that it shouldn't be a huge flop. I want to make a machine capable of playing Starcraft II, doing displays on two monitors, doing some monte carlo particle transport calculations (number crunching, singlethreaded), other kinds of engineering homework, video chat, and browsing the internet.
I'd like to spend under $600 on my system, excluding peripherals+monitors. Since I graduate in about a year and should get a high paying job then, I'd like a system that will hold me over pretty well, but that has a high potential for upgrades, like an SSD, stronger processor, a dedicated graphics card, and more RAM. I would like to use an AMD processor, and I will be buying all of my parts from the US. Also, I'll be downloading Windows 7 Ultimate (64-bit) through MSDN.
I have read several similar threads here already, and I plan to game in 1366 x 768 resolution. I'm going to build the system in May or early June, and I will overclock it. I'm hoping to unlock the 4th core on the processor I've tentatively chosen, but I'll definitely be fine with just 2 or 3 cores.
Are all of the parts I've chosen compatible? I'm especially concerned about the compatibility of the RAM in this build.
Processor:
AMD Athlon II X3 435 Rana 2.9GHz Socket AM3 95W Triple-Core Processor Model ADX435WFGIBOX - $75 on Newegg
Mobo:
ASUS M4A89GTD PRO/USB3 AM3 AMD 890GX SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 HDMI ATX AMD Motherboard - $145 on Newegg
RAM:
Kingston ValueRAM 2GB (2 x 1GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1333 (PC3 10600) Dual Channel Kit Desktop Memory Model KVR1333D3N9K2/2G - 2 at $57 each on Newegg
HDD:
Western Digital WD5001AALS Caviar Black Hard Drive - 500GB, 7200 rpm, 32MB, SATA-3G - $60 on TigerDirect
Case:
C283-1086 :: Cooler Master Centurion 5 - Blue ATX Mid-Tower Case with Front USB, Firewire and Audio Ports (20.61 lbs) - $50 on TigerDirect
PSU:
ULT-LSP750 :: Ultra LSP750 750-Watt Power Supply - ATX, SATA-Ready, SLI-Ready, 135mm Fan, Lifetime Warranty (11 lbs) - $80 on TigerDirect
Total cost so far: $524
Things I will do about a year after the build:
- Add a graphics card
- Upgrade the processor
- Replace the RAM
- Add either a large capacity SSD or a small one and a large HDD
Thanks in advance!