- Apr 17, 2003
 
- 910
 
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Back in 2005 I put together a nice system for myself, considering of high end parts. By that I mean, I did not choose parts based on "bang for the buck" so much as "what is the best I can get RIGHT NOW".
I'm running an AMD X2 4200+ (which I easily take to 3.0 GHz if I want to, however I prefer NOT to overclock), Corsair 3500LL Memory rated as DDR433, Radeon 1900xtx video card and a RaptorX hard drive, yes, the one with the clear window on top.
By today's standards my system isn't very impressive, but in 2005 it was pretty close to the top without being ridiculous (4200+ X2 $480 instead of the FX60 priced at $1100 at the time). The reason I am posting this, is to state that this system still keeps up well with apps AND games TODAY. That is over 2 years of solid, fast performance, which set me back about $2,600 and change.
I can still run most of the newest games in full res (1920x1200x32) with full FX (everything on and maxed out), getting more than adequate framerates (30+ fps avg). I run Vista nice and smooth, no issues there. Overall, I haven't felt the need to upgrade for over 2 years because I haven't played a game or used an app that slowed my system down to a crawl...and yes, I do play plenty of games including Bioshock, Fear, WoWcraft, Doom 3, C&C3...you name it.
So what I am saying is that spending a little more on parts has cost me less in the long run since I did not need to upgrade my system once every 6 to 12 months (as I used to do). If I spent $1,300 a year going for "bang for the buck" upgrades, I'd essentially be paying a lot for slight bumps in performance, and most likely would have to over clock to be "competitive".
Today I am planning out my next upgrade, which will most likely be a C2D based system. I have to do my research first but I'll post my new system up as soon as I piece it together. I'm going to shoot for 3 year longevity on a $2,500 budget...so I am hoping a new video card comes out that is as fast today as the 1900xtx was in 2005, I think that was the trump card for me back then.
			
			I'm running an AMD X2 4200+ (which I easily take to 3.0 GHz if I want to, however I prefer NOT to overclock), Corsair 3500LL Memory rated as DDR433, Radeon 1900xtx video card and a RaptorX hard drive, yes, the one with the clear window on top.
By today's standards my system isn't very impressive, but in 2005 it was pretty close to the top without being ridiculous (4200+ X2 $480 instead of the FX60 priced at $1100 at the time). The reason I am posting this, is to state that this system still keeps up well with apps AND games TODAY. That is over 2 years of solid, fast performance, which set me back about $2,600 and change.
I can still run most of the newest games in full res (1920x1200x32) with full FX (everything on and maxed out), getting more than adequate framerates (30+ fps avg). I run Vista nice and smooth, no issues there. Overall, I haven't felt the need to upgrade for over 2 years because I haven't played a game or used an app that slowed my system down to a crawl...and yes, I do play plenty of games including Bioshock, Fear, WoWcraft, Doom 3, C&C3...you name it.
So what I am saying is that spending a little more on parts has cost me less in the long run since I did not need to upgrade my system once every 6 to 12 months (as I used to do). If I spent $1,300 a year going for "bang for the buck" upgrades, I'd essentially be paying a lot for slight bumps in performance, and most likely would have to over clock to be "competitive".
Today I am planning out my next upgrade, which will most likely be a C2D based system. I have to do my research first but I'll post my new system up as soon as I piece it together. I'm going to shoot for 3 year longevity on a $2,500 budget...so I am hoping a new video card comes out that is as fast today as the 1900xtx was in 2005, I think that was the trump card for me back then.
				
		
			