Hi guys 
I'm looking for guidance and input for building my new computer
I'm building this computer to play modern games--specifically, Battlefield 2, Quake 4, and F.E.A.R--surf the web, edit photographs,
and play music. One of my main goals is to have this computer produce over 100 fps in Quake 4, using the high quality setting--"everything"
turned on minus Anti-Aliasing and Anisotropic filtering--at 1152x864 resolution, with the fps dropping no further than 60 in the most
demanding situations( I can see if this computer produces 100 fps with a timedemo). I want the absolute best stability, power, longevity, and
overclockability attainable with $1600.
I've done moderate research to acquaint myself with today's hardware, by reading customer reviews(newegg.com), reviews found on google.com,
and forum topics. Below, there is a list of the hardware components I look forward to using for my needs, along with their prices.
Following this list is a section containing links to tomshardware.com's search guide, which provides the cheapest deal for a product;
the stores from which I want to buy the products; benchmarks and reviews of the particular hardware; and comments on why I chose the particular
hardware components for my computer. This section should provide an idea of why I chose these particular components. The last section in this
post contains additional information relavant to my endeavor.
(1)AMD Athlon 64 X2 3800+ Dual Core Processor--$320.84
(2)DFI LANPARTY UT nF4 Ultra-D--$119.99
(3)Corsair 2GB PC4000 TWINX20484000PT--$230.99
(4)NEC ND-3550A DVD Burner--$44.96
(5)Hitachi Deskstar T7K250 250GB--$109.75
(6)eVGA e-GeForce 7800 GT CO Video Card--$346.02
(7)OCZ Technology PowerStream 520W--$131.04
(8)Creative X-Fi XtremeMusic--$110.84
(9)Windows XP Professional with SP2 OEM--$129.98
total: $1544.41
CPU
(1) X2 3800+ Dual Core Processor
http://stores.tomshardware.com/search_getprod.php/masterid=10479095/promo_id=63
$320.84 at pchotline.com
--
http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/cpu/display/cpu-games2_6.html benchmark containing the x2 3800+
( The link above has benchmarks of all the games I've mentioned in the introduction, running on the same cpu, motherboard, graphics card,
and same amount of memory that I want. In the benchmark, this set up produces 76.2 fps with Quake 4 set to ultra quality at 1280x1024 resolution,
and 4x FSAA enabled. Being that 1280x1024 resolution is approximately one resolution above 1152x864, and that 4x FSAA commonly decreases games'
fps by 10-25 if it's turned on, I believe my computer will produce close to 100 fps in Quake 4 with the x2 3800+ and the 7800 GT. My cpu choice
after the x2 3800+ is the 4000+ San Diego single core processor, since it sells for almost the same price as x2 3800+, and has excellent
performance in games. But I prefer the x2 3800+ over the 4000+ because it outperforms the 4000+ in multi-threaded applications and multi-tasking,
and is on par with the 4000+ in games played in high graphic settings. The x2 3800+ will also be more future proof than the 4000+ Sandy, as
multi-threaded games are released. I hope to overclock the x2 3800+ 500 mhz to around 2.5 ghz. The higher the clock, the better
)
MotherBoard
(2) DFI LANPARTY UT nF4 Ultra-D
http://stores.tomshardware.com/search_g...168&search=DFI+LANPARTY+UT+nF4+Ultra-D
$119.99 at zipzoomfly.com
--
http://www.cluboc.net/reviews/motherboards/dfi/dfiultraD/p5.htm review
( I decided to go with this motherboard because I've seen it as a very popular overclocking motherboard on the web.)
Memory
(3)Corsair 2GB PC4000 TWINX20484000PT
http://stores.tomshardware.com/search_g...sterid=13003373&search=TWINX20484000PT
$230.99 at monarchcomputer.com
http://www.legitreviews.com/article/268/7/
( The review above uses the same motherboard and cpu I will use in my system. I plan to buy the TWINX2048-4000PT because I want to easily
overclock the x2 3800+ cpu from 2.0 ghz to 2.5 ghz. This ram was suggested to me for that task.)
DVD±RW
(4) NEC ND-3550A DVD Burner oem
http://stores.tomshardware.com/search_getprod.php/masterid=13841402
$44.96 at SuperMediaStore.com
--
http://www.cdfreaks.com/article/214/9 review of the ND-3540A
( I've learned from user reviews and internet reviews that the NEC ND-3540A is a reliable, quality DVD burner. With $.84 more cents,
I can get the newer ND-3550A model. I've learned from a customer review that this model is supposedly more reliable than the older ND-3540A.)
Hard drive
(5) Hitachi Deskstar T7K250 250GB
http://stores.tomshardware.com/search_getprod.php/masterid=8451346/promo_id=63
$109.75 from zipzoomfly.com
--
http://www.anandtech.com/storage/showdoc.aspx?i=2454&p=10 Benchmark showing the T7K250 loading Doom 3 faster than the Raptor 74 gig hd
( This hard drive doesn't have outstanding reviews on the web. However, I chose the T7K250 over the WD Raptor WD740GD because it performs
similiarly to the Raptor hard drive, yet provides more storage space; and over the Western Digital Caviar SE16 250GB hard drive, because the
performance differences between the two are nominal*, but the T7K250 costs about $10 cheaper. I was told that my first hard drive choice, the
Maxtor DiamondMax 10 300GB Hard Drive with 16 mb cache, may give me compatiblity problems with the nforce4 chipset. If I wasn't a game recording
and screenshot maniac, I would buy the Raptor WD740GD. But as it is, I love to record every minute I play Quake 2 online, and I take thousands
of screenshots of this 7+ year old game. So I'm pretty sure I'll have the same habits in the beautiful Quake 4
. *I haven't found any
benchmarks directly comparing the T7K250 to the Caviar SE16)
Video card
(6) eVGA e-GeForce 7800 GT CO Video Card
http://stores.tomshardware.com/search_getprod.php/masterid=12596594
$346.02 at mwave.com
--
http://hardware.gamershell.com/articles/evga_e-geforce_7800_gt_co_review/6.html review
http://www.amdzone.com/modules.php?op=m...index&req=viewarticle&artid=191&page=2 benchmarks
( After researching a range of video cards, the 7800 GT seems to be the best bang-for-buck video card I can get. The e-Geforce 7800 GT
CO stands out from other 7800 GT products because of its factory overclocked core and memory clock speeds, which I prefer to the clock speeds
of other 7800 GT variants; and its copper cooling solution, which might allow good overclocking results. The first link above shows this card
performing 1-3 fps below the 7800 GTX in F.E.A.R, on a 3800+ Venice cpu.)
Power Supply
(7) OCZ Technology PowerStream 520W Power Supply With Adjustable Power Rails
http://stores.tomshardware.com/search_getprod.php/masterid=3996876
$131.04 at directron.com
--
http://www.tweaknews.net/reviews/ocz520/index6.php review
http://www.dfi-street.com/forum/showthread.php?t=10854&highlight=sli-dr+psu psu guide
( I decided to use this psu based on all the great reviews it has, the many times it's been recommended in general, and its
inclusion of adjustable power rails, which may help system stability, specifically when overclocking hardware. I have 5 case fans,
but I found it very effective to use only one of the case fans which faces the motherboard. *It lower's my t-bird cpu heavy-load tempurature
about 10 degrees celcius*;D)
Sound card
(8) Creative X-Fi XtremeMusic
http://stores.tomshardware.com/search_getprod.php/masterid=11274962
$110.84 at pchotline.com
--
http://techreport.com/reviews/2005q4/soundblaster-x-fi/index.x?pg=22 review
( This sound card has great reviews on the web. I eventually want to buy the Beyerdynamic DT880 headphone.
If anyone has any thoughts on this, feel free to comment
)
Operating system
(9) Microsoft Windows XP Professional W/SP2
http://stores.tomshardware.com/search_getprod.php/masterid=4197929
$129.98 at viosoftware.com
--
( I was told that Windows XP Professional is better for gaming than Windows XP home edition.)
From this point, until early Janurary, I will research forums for information regarding the hardware I'm buying,
and hope that prices continue to drop.
Any suggestions, advice, links, or anything else that can help me buy gaming-oriented hardware within my budget,
build it in any better-than-standard methodical way, and use steps I should take once I successfully install windows( to gauge the computer's
stability, etc.) will be very helpful
Opinions and advice that are logical and use references will be greatly helpful;D
And, if anyone can refer me to a good amd64 and nforce4 overclocking guide, that also would be very helful
Thank you!
--------------------
Additional info
Cpu Cooling ?
(4) Thermaltake CL-P0114 Big Typhoon
http://stores.tomshardware.com/search_g...7930408&search=Thermaltake+Big+Typhoon
$46.90 at 4reseller.com
--
http://www.3dxtreme.net/index.php?id=ttbigtyphoon4
http://www.overclockers.ru/lab/19897.shtml
( I want to overclock the x2 3800+ to at least 2.5 ghz from 2.0 ghz, so I thought the Big TT would be excellent cooling, especially for
its price when compared to the Thermalright xp-90/xp-120 plus fan combinations. However, I decided a DVD-burner will be more useful for the
about the same price as the Big TT. I will probably buy the Big Typhoon later on, when I feel it's necessary.)
******
I am interested in getting the Beyerdynamic DT880 headphones next year February. After comparing headphones from Sennheiser HD280 Pro to AKG k701, I settled
to decide between the DT880 and the Audio-Technica ATH-A900. The A900 were often recommended for gaming, but I liked the DT880 more than the
A900 because it is often compared to and thought of as a hi-fi headphone, and my family might be mad if I block them out to hear my games better.
http://www.pricegrabber.com/search_getp...hp/masterid=4708822/search=dt880/skd=1
$235.80 at www.bhphotovideo.com
--
Here's some reviews of the DT880
http://www.headphonereviews.org/headpho...ESSID=a2257a6b9224e7fbff6ce3debc383a13
http://www6.head-fi.org/forums/showthread.php?t=25952
http://www.6moons.com/audioreviews/beyer/dt880.html
--
Below is my thread concerning which amp I should use with the . Head-fi.org has vast and in-depth information on a large variety of
headphones.
http://www6.head-fi.org/forums/showthread.php?t=148873
--
This thread has suggested headphones for gaming
http://www6.head-fi.org/forums/showthread.php?t=147274&page=1&pp=20
******
$
I've been buying computer hardware from newegg.com for a long time(since 2001). Fortunately, I came across tomshardware.com. Just to give
you an idea of how fortunate I am, I calculated the total cost of the exact same hardware available from both tomshardware.com's search guide and
newegg.com, in early September of this year. The total from tomshardware.com was $196.82 less than newegg.com's total. lol!
******
I would like to thank the guys at techreport.com/forum System Builders Anonymous forum for all the help they provided in helping me shape this gaming
system to what it is today. Thank you!
I'm looking for guidance and input for building my new computer
I'm building this computer to play modern games--specifically, Battlefield 2, Quake 4, and F.E.A.R--surf the web, edit photographs,
and play music. One of my main goals is to have this computer produce over 100 fps in Quake 4, using the high quality setting--"everything"
turned on minus Anti-Aliasing and Anisotropic filtering--at 1152x864 resolution, with the fps dropping no further than 60 in the most
demanding situations( I can see if this computer produces 100 fps with a timedemo). I want the absolute best stability, power, longevity, and
overclockability attainable with $1600.
I've done moderate research to acquaint myself with today's hardware, by reading customer reviews(newegg.com), reviews found on google.com,
and forum topics. Below, there is a list of the hardware components I look forward to using for my needs, along with their prices.
Following this list is a section containing links to tomshardware.com's search guide, which provides the cheapest deal for a product;
the stores from which I want to buy the products; benchmarks and reviews of the particular hardware; and comments on why I chose the particular
hardware components for my computer. This section should provide an idea of why I chose these particular components. The last section in this
post contains additional information relavant to my endeavor.
(1)AMD Athlon 64 X2 3800+ Dual Core Processor--$320.84
(2)DFI LANPARTY UT nF4 Ultra-D--$119.99
(3)Corsair 2GB PC4000 TWINX20484000PT--$230.99
(4)NEC ND-3550A DVD Burner--$44.96
(5)Hitachi Deskstar T7K250 250GB--$109.75
(6)eVGA e-GeForce 7800 GT CO Video Card--$346.02
(7)OCZ Technology PowerStream 520W--$131.04
(8)Creative X-Fi XtremeMusic--$110.84
(9)Windows XP Professional with SP2 OEM--$129.98
total: $1544.41
CPU
(1) X2 3800+ Dual Core Processor
http://stores.tomshardware.com/search_getprod.php/masterid=10479095/promo_id=63
$320.84 at pchotline.com
--
http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/cpu/display/cpu-games2_6.html benchmark containing the x2 3800+
( The link above has benchmarks of all the games I've mentioned in the introduction, running on the same cpu, motherboard, graphics card,
and same amount of memory that I want. In the benchmark, this set up produces 76.2 fps with Quake 4 set to ultra quality at 1280x1024 resolution,
and 4x FSAA enabled. Being that 1280x1024 resolution is approximately one resolution above 1152x864, and that 4x FSAA commonly decreases games'
fps by 10-25 if it's turned on, I believe my computer will produce close to 100 fps in Quake 4 with the x2 3800+ and the 7800 GT. My cpu choice
after the x2 3800+ is the 4000+ San Diego single core processor, since it sells for almost the same price as x2 3800+, and has excellent
performance in games. But I prefer the x2 3800+ over the 4000+ because it outperforms the 4000+ in multi-threaded applications and multi-tasking,
and is on par with the 4000+ in games played in high graphic settings. The x2 3800+ will also be more future proof than the 4000+ Sandy, as
multi-threaded games are released. I hope to overclock the x2 3800+ 500 mhz to around 2.5 ghz. The higher the clock, the better
MotherBoard
(2) DFI LANPARTY UT nF4 Ultra-D
http://stores.tomshardware.com/search_g...168&search=DFI+LANPARTY+UT+nF4+Ultra-D
$119.99 at zipzoomfly.com
--
http://www.cluboc.net/reviews/motherboards/dfi/dfiultraD/p5.htm review
( I decided to go with this motherboard because I've seen it as a very popular overclocking motherboard on the web.)
Memory
(3)Corsair 2GB PC4000 TWINX20484000PT
http://stores.tomshardware.com/search_g...sterid=13003373&search=TWINX20484000PT
$230.99 at monarchcomputer.com
http://www.legitreviews.com/article/268/7/
( The review above uses the same motherboard and cpu I will use in my system. I plan to buy the TWINX2048-4000PT because I want to easily
overclock the x2 3800+ cpu from 2.0 ghz to 2.5 ghz. This ram was suggested to me for that task.)
DVD±RW
(4) NEC ND-3550A DVD Burner oem
http://stores.tomshardware.com/search_getprod.php/masterid=13841402
$44.96 at SuperMediaStore.com
--
http://www.cdfreaks.com/article/214/9 review of the ND-3540A
( I've learned from user reviews and internet reviews that the NEC ND-3540A is a reliable, quality DVD burner. With $.84 more cents,
I can get the newer ND-3550A model. I've learned from a customer review that this model is supposedly more reliable than the older ND-3540A.)
Hard drive
(5) Hitachi Deskstar T7K250 250GB
http://stores.tomshardware.com/search_getprod.php/masterid=8451346/promo_id=63
$109.75 from zipzoomfly.com
--
http://www.anandtech.com/storage/showdoc.aspx?i=2454&p=10 Benchmark showing the T7K250 loading Doom 3 faster than the Raptor 74 gig hd
( This hard drive doesn't have outstanding reviews on the web. However, I chose the T7K250 over the WD Raptor WD740GD because it performs
similiarly to the Raptor hard drive, yet provides more storage space; and over the Western Digital Caviar SE16 250GB hard drive, because the
performance differences between the two are nominal*, but the T7K250 costs about $10 cheaper. I was told that my first hard drive choice, the
Maxtor DiamondMax 10 300GB Hard Drive with 16 mb cache, may give me compatiblity problems with the nforce4 chipset. If I wasn't a game recording
and screenshot maniac, I would buy the Raptor WD740GD. But as it is, I love to record every minute I play Quake 2 online, and I take thousands
of screenshots of this 7+ year old game. So I'm pretty sure I'll have the same habits in the beautiful Quake 4
benchmarks directly comparing the T7K250 to the Caviar SE16)
Video card
(6) eVGA e-GeForce 7800 GT CO Video Card
http://stores.tomshardware.com/search_getprod.php/masterid=12596594
$346.02 at mwave.com
--
http://hardware.gamershell.com/articles/evga_e-geforce_7800_gt_co_review/6.html review
http://www.amdzone.com/modules.php?op=m...index&req=viewarticle&artid=191&page=2 benchmarks
( After researching a range of video cards, the 7800 GT seems to be the best bang-for-buck video card I can get. The e-Geforce 7800 GT
CO stands out from other 7800 GT products because of its factory overclocked core and memory clock speeds, which I prefer to the clock speeds
of other 7800 GT variants; and its copper cooling solution, which might allow good overclocking results. The first link above shows this card
performing 1-3 fps below the 7800 GTX in F.E.A.R, on a 3800+ Venice cpu.)
Power Supply
(7) OCZ Technology PowerStream 520W Power Supply With Adjustable Power Rails
http://stores.tomshardware.com/search_getprod.php/masterid=3996876
$131.04 at directron.com
--
http://www.tweaknews.net/reviews/ocz520/index6.php review
http://www.dfi-street.com/forum/showthread.php?t=10854&highlight=sli-dr+psu psu guide
( I decided to use this psu based on all the great reviews it has, the many times it's been recommended in general, and its
inclusion of adjustable power rails, which may help system stability, specifically when overclocking hardware. I have 5 case fans,
but I found it very effective to use only one of the case fans which faces the motherboard. *It lower's my t-bird cpu heavy-load tempurature
about 10 degrees celcius*;D)
Sound card
(8) Creative X-Fi XtremeMusic
http://stores.tomshardware.com/search_getprod.php/masterid=11274962
$110.84 at pchotline.com
--
http://techreport.com/reviews/2005q4/soundblaster-x-fi/index.x?pg=22 review
( This sound card has great reviews on the web. I eventually want to buy the Beyerdynamic DT880 headphone.
If anyone has any thoughts on this, feel free to comment
Operating system
(9) Microsoft Windows XP Professional W/SP2
http://stores.tomshardware.com/search_getprod.php/masterid=4197929
$129.98 at viosoftware.com
--
( I was told that Windows XP Professional is better for gaming than Windows XP home edition.)
From this point, until early Janurary, I will research forums for information regarding the hardware I'm buying,
and hope that prices continue to drop.
Any suggestions, advice, links, or anything else that can help me buy gaming-oriented hardware within my budget,
build it in any better-than-standard methodical way, and use steps I should take once I successfully install windows( to gauge the computer's
stability, etc.) will be very helpful
And, if anyone can refer me to a good amd64 and nforce4 overclocking guide, that also would be very helful
Thank you!
--------------------
Additional info
Cpu Cooling ?
(4) Thermaltake CL-P0114 Big Typhoon
http://stores.tomshardware.com/search_g...7930408&search=Thermaltake+Big+Typhoon
$46.90 at 4reseller.com
--
http://www.3dxtreme.net/index.php?id=ttbigtyphoon4
http://www.overclockers.ru/lab/19897.shtml
( I want to overclock the x2 3800+ to at least 2.5 ghz from 2.0 ghz, so I thought the Big TT would be excellent cooling, especially for
its price when compared to the Thermalright xp-90/xp-120 plus fan combinations. However, I decided a DVD-burner will be more useful for the
about the same price as the Big TT. I will probably buy the Big Typhoon later on, when I feel it's necessary.)
******
I am interested in getting the Beyerdynamic DT880 headphones next year February. After comparing headphones from Sennheiser HD280 Pro to AKG k701, I settled
to decide between the DT880 and the Audio-Technica ATH-A900. The A900 were often recommended for gaming, but I liked the DT880 more than the
A900 because it is often compared to and thought of as a hi-fi headphone, and my family might be mad if I block them out to hear my games better.
http://www.pricegrabber.com/search_getp...hp/masterid=4708822/search=dt880/skd=1
$235.80 at www.bhphotovideo.com
--
Here's some reviews of the DT880
http://www.headphonereviews.org/headpho...ESSID=a2257a6b9224e7fbff6ce3debc383a13
http://www6.head-fi.org/forums/showthread.php?t=25952
http://www.6moons.com/audioreviews/beyer/dt880.html
--
Below is my thread concerning which amp I should use with the . Head-fi.org has vast and in-depth information on a large variety of
headphones.
http://www6.head-fi.org/forums/showthread.php?t=148873
--
This thread has suggested headphones for gaming
http://www6.head-fi.org/forums/showthread.php?t=147274&page=1&pp=20
******
$
I've been buying computer hardware from newegg.com for a long time(since 2001). Fortunately, I came across tomshardware.com. Just to give
you an idea of how fortunate I am, I calculated the total cost of the exact same hardware available from both tomshardware.com's search guide and
newegg.com, in early September of this year. The total from tomshardware.com was $196.82 less than newegg.com's total. lol!
******
I would like to thank the guys at techreport.com/forum System Builders Anonymous forum for all the help they provided in helping me shape this gaming
system to what it is today. Thank you!