Originally posted by: marvs5
My current desktop rig has unexpectedly died on me (something on the mobo or CPU dies when it heats up and kills the system). It was an Athlon XP 1700+ with a Gigabyte VIA-KT266A based mobo. When I built it in late 2001, the choices back then were pretty simple. You could get an Athlon XP or Intel Pentium. The XPs were cheaper, but ran faster and hotter.
Now that I'm forced to get a new CPU/mobo setup and after having done some research, I'm really confused by the plethora of choices available today. So I'm seeking input from the community.
The machine first and foremost is a work machine for my business (Microsoft Office apps). So reliability is key. The machine will also act as a PVR, will do some video/audio processing and very limited gaming (Unreal Tournament).
I also want to re-use the remaining parts of the old system that still work: 2 IDE/ATA-100 hard drives, 2 IDE optical drives, Hauppauge PVR-150 (PCI), Antec case with 400W PSU (the 412X) and a cheapie ATI AGP video card (though I would be willing to upgrade to a cheapie PCI-E card). I also want to get technology that would be upgradable into the future.
So, all that being said, I'm looking at both the Athlon 64 and Pentium 4 630 as they seem to be the coolest running CPUs (and I'm guessing heat killed my existing rig). I am open to other ideas. That being said, anyone have any thoughts on this and which chipset is the best to accompany each CPU?
Thx in advance for your help and input.
AMD Athlon systems are better performers in Microsoft Office Apps and Gaming and Intel P4's are generally superior/faster in audio/video encoding, 3D rendering and content creation applications.
Based on your needs, I will recommend a system similar (but with some adjustments) to a system I will be putting together when the rest of the components arrive next week. I like you had some optical drives, a hard drive, soundcard, keyboard/mouse, monitor and speakers previously-purchased for a system that never got built.
I posted a thread
over here at Anandtech and another one
over here that were designed INITIALLY to help me determine whether I should go Intel P4/Intel chipset or Amd Athlon64/nForce4 chipset. My computer uses are very similar to yours and I was convinced to go with an AMD Athlon 64 Socket 939 "Venice Core" CPU ("Venice" core offers some advantages over the "Winchester" core in that it has a better memory controller and support for Intel's SSE instruction set among other things.)
I won't base a system on the newest "San Diego" with 1MB of level 2 cache (versus 512 KB for the "Venice") because the SD's start at the 3700+
and around $334 !
Also, I am going to assume for now that you will NOT be overclocking; we can address that issue later if that is a priority for you.
You should probably use a PCI-E based mobo since the majority, if not all, of the mobos that support the Socket 939 "Venice" core are PCI-E based.
Since you will need a PCI-E graphics card but want a "cheapy" I will include a low-end PCI-E card in the recommendations. This card can be sold or scraped down the road and replaced with a more expensive/faster performing card. I am going to be suggesting an ATI Radeon X300SE chipset-based graphics card.
So here are the recommendations:
Motherboard - The $135.50 delivered
Asus A8N-E mobo - a nforce4 Ultra/Socket 939 board which has Asus quality and plenty of goodies including PCI-E slots, PATA IDE (w/RAID), SATA (w/RAID), Gigabit LAN, 8 channel on-board audio but no onboard firewire.
CPU - This
AMD Athlon64 3000+ 1.8GHz Socket 939 "Venice" Retail Boxed CPU for $159
( If you want a little more horsepower you could go with this
AMD Athlon64 3200+ 2.0 GHz Socket 939 "Venice" Retail-Boxed CPU for $209 )
RAM - This very popular
Corsair ValueSelect 1 GB (2 x 512MB) DDR 400 CAS 2.5 RAM for $84.32 delivered or this
G.Skill 1 GB (2 x 512 MB) DDR400 2-3-3-6 RAM for $102.32 delivered.
Videocard - This
ASUS EAX300SE-X/TD/128 Radeon X300SE 128MB 64-bit DDR PCI-Express x16 Video Card - Retail for $64.50 delivered. I chose this card because it has the wondeful 2D graphics provided by the ATI Radeon x300SE video chip which yet can still run some current games at low resolutions. This ASUS model carries their quality name and also has DVI output (for DVI LCD flat-panel monitors) and has a composite video output to TV.
May I also recommened considering this HIGHLY recommended Power Supply, the $82.95
SeaSonic S12-430 . It is known to be very efficient under low, mid and high loads, very quiet and has great features like a SINGLE 120mm fan, ACTIVE PFC (Power Factor Correction) , DUAL 12V rails and good airflow design. It is important to have a GOOD, reliable, stable, efficient P/S powering your system.
Optional if Souncard is needed - this
SB Audigy 2 Value Souuncard
for $53 delivered[/quote]
This brings the total delivered price for the system with the AMD Athlon64 3000+ "Venice"/Corsair ValueRam with P/S from $526.27 ( $579.27 including the SB Audigy Value Soundcard ) to the higher-priced AMD Athlon 3200+ "Venice"/G.Skill RAM with P/S at $594.31 ( $647.31 with SB Audigy Value Soundcard ).
If you absolutely need onboard firewire may I suggest either this $124.99 delivered nForce4 Ultra
EPoX EP-9NPA+Ultra mobo which is also very popular at this forum or this $145.50 delivered
MSI K8N Neo4 Platinum mobo or this $143.50 delivered
GIGABYTE GA-K8N Ultra-9 motherboard.
IF you are into overclocking or gaming many people here like this
DFI LANPARTY UT nF4 Ultra-D motherboard for $128.99 delivered (with the current $9 INSTANT rebate at NewEgg). Note that it does not have any legacy serial or parallel ports (if you need those) and has one MORE PCI-E x16 slot but one LESS standard 32 bit PCI slot than the other boards mentioned. This board is very popular amongst GAMERS and OVERCLOCKERS. Please note that it is know to be very RAM FINICKY so you may want to question forum members who own this board about the memory brand and type that they are using with this board.
If you like the ASUS A8N-E board and can spare having to use one of your standard 32 bit PCI slots you could always add this
Koutech PCI to 1394a Card for just $16 delivered to add FIREWIRE support to your system.
I hope I have been of help to you !
If you need any OThER components for your system or want some other recommendations please let me know in this thread or via the Private Message feature.
Good Luck !
Greg
P.S. Mary, I had to edit this post because I discovered I mistakenly put a comment about the videocard after the Asus motherboard link and that may have been confusing. I corrected it and I hope you re-read this post !