Certainly a good lineup; not sure about using the SSD, there are both benefits and cons, I'll explain later.
The processor definitely has the most bang for the buck; I certainly wouldn't recommend getting anything less than that, especially at it's price. See these charts for comparisons (Highest gain is +450 pounds for 16%😉; as you can tell, the i7-930 is quite a deal for its power.
Rendering time of (x) file in Adobe Premier Pro CS4
Rendering time of (x) file in Autodesk 3DS Max 2009
Excellent choice on Mobo. Asus has dropped in reliability over the last 5 years or so, but they're still fairly good and most of the issues are DoA boards. Just be aware you may need to pay for shipping 2 or three times on this board. Or maybe once; luck may shine on you.
For the parts you've specified the wattage comes to ~446 watts which, assuming standard 10% depreciation, your PSU will be able to support for at least 4 years, more likely 5-6 or more.
I'm not certain about the benefits of the SSD setup. Yes, it's very fast, but also pathetically small. Small enough that in less than 10 full length HD Video projects you'll fill the fscker if it's your primary drive. The solution would be to run an automatic backup to a RAID 1 using the F3's, which would be terribly slow since you loose like 20% of the drive's speed in RAID 1. If you ran the backup at night it'd be a moot point, but if you spend a lot of time pulling old data, you loose the benefit of the SSD.
I have about 140 pounds for your SDD, which worth almost 3 F3's. Let's compare a RAID 0+1 with 4 F3's against the SSD w/ a RAID 1 (F3's) as an archive.
Setup 1: Primary Drive: Redundant? Yes
Size: 2 TB
Avg Read: 220 MB/s
Avg Write: 180 MB/s
Archiving required? No
Cost: ~200 Pounds
Setup 2: Primary Drive: Redundant? No
Size: 60 GB
Avg Read: 285 MB/s (+30% spd)
Avg Write: 275 MB/s (+35% spd)
Archiving Required? Yes
Secondary Drive: Redundant? Yes
Size: 1 TB
Avg Read: 190 MB/s (-15% spd)
Avg Write: 90 MB/s (-55%)
Cost: ~240 Pounds
Summary: RAID 0+1 (F3x4) is cheaper and has twice the space, but is ~15% slower than the alternative. It offers full redundancy over it's data, so if retention of non-archived (active) work is critical, this setup has a significant edge.
SDD + RAID 1 (F3x2) has a 30% gain in speed against the primary bottleneck for Video Processing applications. The primary work data has no redundancy, increasing the risk of data loss; SSD's are much more reliable than platter disks, but there is still a small amount of data-loss risk involved, more if archiving is not performed regularly. After OS & applications are installed, working space on the drive could be anywhere from 20GB to a meager 10GB. Working by pulling data from the archive suffers significant loss: Pull data from archive at -15% speed, then process and update data at +30% speed; archive as normal during non-work hours. This comes to more time spent moving data than the improved primary drive speed saves. Redundancy on archive; data loss chances are negligible.
So what it comes down to is how much space all your applications, plug-ins, OS, and resources take on your drive, and how often you have to go into the secondary drive for resources. CS4 takes 10GB, CS5 25GB. Maya takes 4GB. 3DS Max takes 7 GB (Recommended, Including Swap). Windows 7 Professional 64-Bit takes 20 GB, +~18 GB pagefile (dependent on memory size [1.5*12GB]). Sizes of resources (surfaces etc.) on primary drive vary.
Lowest space requirements, not counting resources are 46 GB (30% Pagefile, 76%).
Highest space requirements, not counting resources are 74 GB (100%+).
You can see the dilemma with SSD here. They make good primary drives for speed, but their size is pathetic by modern standards. Even with the smallest set of applications, you only have 15 GB's for working on your drive; you'll have to run archives at LEAST daily, more likely twice a day.
Food for thought. You CAN get faster render times with the SSD, but is the frequent archiving worth the speed gain? Depends on how big your projects are. Going to CS5 later down the line is out of the question on this SSD.
Also, you didn't factor the cost of Win7. Assuming you don't already have a copy, add 90 pounds to the total cost (Win 7 Pro 64-Bit OEM System Builders' Copy)
The processor definitely has the most bang for the buck; I certainly wouldn't recommend getting anything less than that, especially at it's price. See these charts for comparisons (Highest gain is +450 pounds for 16%😉; as you can tell, the i7-930 is quite a deal for its power.
Rendering time of (x) file in Adobe Premier Pro CS4
Rendering time of (x) file in Autodesk 3DS Max 2009
Excellent choice on Mobo. Asus has dropped in reliability over the last 5 years or so, but they're still fairly good and most of the issues are DoA boards. Just be aware you may need to pay for shipping 2 or three times on this board. Or maybe once; luck may shine on you.
For the parts you've specified the wattage comes to ~446 watts which, assuming standard 10% depreciation, your PSU will be able to support for at least 4 years, more likely 5-6 or more.
I'm not certain about the benefits of the SSD setup. Yes, it's very fast, but also pathetically small. Small enough that in less than 10 full length HD Video projects you'll fill the fscker if it's your primary drive. The solution would be to run an automatic backup to a RAID 1 using the F3's, which would be terribly slow since you loose like 20% of the drive's speed in RAID 1. If you ran the backup at night it'd be a moot point, but if you spend a lot of time pulling old data, you loose the benefit of the SSD.
I have about 140 pounds for your SDD, which worth almost 3 F3's. Let's compare a RAID 0+1 with 4 F3's against the SSD w/ a RAID 1 (F3's) as an archive.
Setup 1: Primary Drive: Redundant? Yes
Size: 2 TB
Avg Read: 220 MB/s
Avg Write: 180 MB/s
Archiving required? No
Cost: ~200 Pounds
Setup 2: Primary Drive: Redundant? No
Size: 60 GB
Avg Read: 285 MB/s (+30% spd)
Avg Write: 275 MB/s (+35% spd)
Archiving Required? Yes
Secondary Drive: Redundant? Yes
Size: 1 TB
Avg Read: 190 MB/s (-15% spd)
Avg Write: 90 MB/s (-55%)
Cost: ~240 Pounds
Summary: RAID 0+1 (F3x4) is cheaper and has twice the space, but is ~15% slower than the alternative. It offers full redundancy over it's data, so if retention of non-archived (active) work is critical, this setup has a significant edge.
SDD + RAID 1 (F3x2) has a 30% gain in speed against the primary bottleneck for Video Processing applications. The primary work data has no redundancy, increasing the risk of data loss; SSD's are much more reliable than platter disks, but there is still a small amount of data-loss risk involved, more if archiving is not performed regularly. After OS & applications are installed, working space on the drive could be anywhere from 20GB to a meager 10GB. Working by pulling data from the archive suffers significant loss: Pull data from archive at -15% speed, then process and update data at +30% speed; archive as normal during non-work hours. This comes to more time spent moving data than the improved primary drive speed saves. Redundancy on archive; data loss chances are negligible.
So what it comes down to is how much space all your applications, plug-ins, OS, and resources take on your drive, and how often you have to go into the secondary drive for resources. CS4 takes 10GB, CS5 25GB. Maya takes 4GB. 3DS Max takes 7 GB (Recommended, Including Swap). Windows 7 Professional 64-Bit takes 20 GB, +~18 GB pagefile (dependent on memory size [1.5*12GB]). Sizes of resources (surfaces etc.) on primary drive vary.
Lowest space requirements, not counting resources are 46 GB (30% Pagefile, 76%).
Highest space requirements, not counting resources are 74 GB (100%+).
You can see the dilemma with SSD here. They make good primary drives for speed, but their size is pathetic by modern standards. Even with the smallest set of applications, you only have 15 GB's for working on your drive; you'll have to run archives at LEAST daily, more likely twice a day.
Food for thought. You CAN get faster render times with the SSD, but is the frequent archiving worth the speed gain? Depends on how big your projects are. Going to CS5 later down the line is out of the question on this SSD.
Also, you didn't factor the cost of Win7. Assuming you don't already have a copy, add 90 pounds to the total cost (Win 7 Pro 64-Bit OEM System Builders' Copy)
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