Question Workhorse Desktop PC

newtechuser

Junior Member
May 17, 2021
4
0
6
Hello
I currently have a Full size Cooler Master HAF X case with the following build components
ASUS P9X79 Pro motherboard
Intel i7 3820 3.6 GHz. CPU - Socket 2011 LGA
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 760 gpu - 2 GB
2 X 4 GB sticks of Kingston DDR3 RAM - 799 MHz
1 TB Western Digital Hard Drive - old and tired
Running windows 10 64 bit OS

The system is slow and cranky
Applications take too long to start and respond

I am not at all hardware savvy or software savvy

I do NOT have any security software protection at all

I run Registry Mechanic and Glary Utilities often

I am NOT a gamer - do NOT play at all

But I use my computer a lot for business and surfing

I need it to be very very RELIABLE and FAST

I DO use graphics software like Corel Draw and sometime Adobe graphics products to fix graphics files

I use a lot of office productivity tools and Customer Relations Management software

I use Acrobat Pro to create and edit pdfs and a lot of graphics file edits

I surf a lot with literally 30 windows open all at once

BUT my computer seems very tired and I think I need an upgrade

I am very confused about whether I should change my entire system or just upgrade

PLEASE advise with detail suggestions on specific hardware

I do NOT mind USED components

I am on a BUDGET

Thank you

Yacob
 

daveybrat

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Jan 31, 2000
5,735
949
126
That's not a bad system still for what you do with it.

I'd upgrade the ram with either an 8GB or 16GB kit. Then replace that old 1TB mechanical drive with a new 1TB SSD. It'll be a night and day difference.
 
  • Like
Reactions: alexbirdie0

newtechuser

Junior Member
May 17, 2021
4
0
6
Thanks Davey
Also system is in a very dusty environment
Could this be the cause of it rebooting on its own at times - due to static electricity ?

Yacob
 

daveybrat

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Jan 31, 2000
5,735
949
126
Probably not static electricity but how dirty is it inside? Do you clean it with an air compressor once in a while?

Also, that cpu is a 130 Watt beast. Are you still using the stock Intel cooler or an aftermarket?
 

newtechuser

Junior Member
May 17, 2021
4
0
6
I have an aftermarket cooling fan and I do sometime use compressed air to blow out the dust from the system
I really do not mind spending some money
Maybe to change the CPU ......
But then I thought that it might be best to get a newer motherboard and newer CPU and better RAM - like DDR4 ???

Not sure if this will all make a lot of difference for what I do ?
 

Steltek

Diamond Member
Mar 29, 2001
3,042
753
136
If by "rebooting" you mean powering off and turning back on, I'd immediately suspect the PSU. This is especially true for a PSU model with a fan being operated in a dusty environment.

When blowing out the case, have you specifically blown the dust out of the PSU? Also, if you are using compressed air from a compressor, make sure you have an inline water filter installed on the pressure hose. Otherwise, you very well may be spraying water or water/oil mist into the case with the pressurized air which itself can cause issues.
 

MalVeauX

Senior member
Dec 19, 2008
653
176
116
Hi,

That system should be fast for basic web-browsing and document prep in PDF. My guess is you have a lot of bloatware or other software running in the background and just bogging this thing down.

You could upgrade in the sense of buying a new motherboard, new latest gen CPU, faster DDR4 memory (16Gb or more) and get onto some NVMe SSD storage and maybe have a faster experience on your software loads. But it's going to be like $1k to bother (and that's if you can get the parts). DDR4 memory and SSD on a fast architecture (latest gen AM4 or Intel) would probably give you the biggest change in heavy PDF processing and multi-tab browsing (RAM intensive).

From an AMD perspective, a Ryzen 5600x ($299) on an appropriate board (x570; around $150), a 1TB NVMe SSD ($150 +/-) and 32Gb DDR4 RAM ($250 +/-). You can re-use your PSU, GPU, Case. So that's about $750 to start. You'd probably want a 2nd SSD (1TB or 2TB) for working from instead of your OS drive for intensive file processing (PDF, content, etc).

Didn't notice your budget somewhere?

Very best,