A question regarding graphics cards/my new PC build.

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RYjet911

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May 11, 2008
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Aphex Demon said:
Hi everybody! :D

I'm building myself a new rig, and I'm stuck on which graphics card to buy D:. Could someone check I've done the rig right too?

Out of the GTS450 - http://www.overclockers.co.uk/showproduct.php?prodid=GX-142-OK&tool=3
Or the Radeon HD 5830 - http://www.overclockers.co.uk/showproduct.php?prodid=GX-168-XF&tool=3

Running on a AMD Phenom II X4 Quad Core 3.40GHz - http://www.overclockers.co.uk/showproduct.php?prodid=CP-253-AM&tool=3

With 8GB RAM DDR3 2 x 4Gb - http://www.overclockers.co.uk/showproduct.php?prodid=MY-053-GS&groupid=701&catid=8&subcat

On this motherboard - http://www.overclockers.co.uk/showproduct.php?prodid=MB-245-GI&tool=3

In the case for £65, which includes a 500W power supply, hence my £600 budget (including monitor) - http://www.overclockers.co.uk/showproduct.php?prodid=CA-225-CM

So could you guys check this is all correct? I' not sure what RAM to get to be honest, and which Graphics Card.

Thank you in advance :)
I managed to come up with a build for £420 with a case with 4 or 5 case fans, AMD Phenom II X6 six core 2.8GHz processor, 4 gigs DDR3 RAM, Radeon 5770, motherboard that supports Crossfire, all it doesn't take into account for is the power supply, so just stick that in as well and it'll be under £500. Prices for everything is based on eBuyer.com.
 

Kabutos

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Oct 21, 2008
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Taxman1 said:
tinyurl.com/falconguide

Just use that as a reference

Protip: Go sandy bridge.
That guide is helpful in giving a sort of general idea, but prices change and new combos come around too frequently for it to be that useful. The boxes of text are more useful than the chart imo.

Also Sandy Bridge is kind of hard on a £400 budget.
 

baddude1337

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Jun 9, 2010
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Sure wish I had super computers like everyone else on here, but I'd prefer a good gaming laptop, which are very hard to come by with any decent specs and sensible price. Though a Toshiba one that is coming out soon looks pretty good.
 

Taxman1

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Sep 14, 2009
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Kabutos said:
Taxman1 said:
tinyurl.com/falconguide

Just use that as a reference

Protip: Go sandy bridge.
That guide is helpful in giving a sort of general idea, but prices change and new combos come around too frequently for it to be that useful. The boxes of text are more useful than the chart imo.

Also Sandy Bridge is kind of hard on a £400 budget.
The guide updates every month, it's fine as long as the current version isn't more than 30 days apart from the last update. He should save up for a higher budget because Sandy Bridge is worth it. If not, he should go with a Phenom II 955 BE and a GTX 460.
 

RadiusXd

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Jun 2, 2010
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whats with 4 and 8 gigs being the only contestants in the great ram debate?

I myself have 6 gigs of triple channel, something to think about.

Unless your set on the MOBO ect.
 

Kabutos

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Oct 21, 2008
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Taxman1 said:
The guide updates every month, it's fine as long as the current version isn't more than 30 days apart from the last update. He should save up for a higher budget because Sandy Bridge is worth it. If not, he should go with a Phenom II 955 BE and a GTX 460.
The prices are based off of Newegg, which isn't very helpful when building outside of the US/Canada. If you look at the price of a 768mb 460 on Scan, it's £115 which is about $186; $50 more than what the guide says. The price of an X4 955 is £89, which is about $140. It's even worse with RAM/PSUs.

RadiusXd said:
whats with 4 and 8 gigs being the only contestants in the great ram debate?

I myself have 6 gigs of triple channel, something to think about.

Unless your set on the MOBO ect.
1366 is pretty much phased out by this point so not many people are going triple channel anymore.

EDIT:
RYjet911 said:
I managed to come up with a build for £420 with a case with 4 or 5 case fans, AMD Phenom II X6 six core 2.8GHz processor, 4 gigs DDR3 RAM, Radeon 5770, motherboard that supports Crossfire, all it doesn't take into account for is the power supply, so just stick that in as well and it'll be under £500. Prices for everything is based on eBuyer.com.
You can save a lot without any performance decrease by going X4 instead of X6.
 

Xhoyl

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Dec 7, 2009
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I use an ATI HD Radeon 5850 with 8 Gigs of RAM, and the thing runs like a dream. Granted, most of the computer was already together for a really good deal, I just bought the video card and a better power supply.
 

StBishop

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Sep 22, 2009
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bahumat42 said:
Yeah it chokes it so much that this page i barely loading
/sarcasm

In real world situations 9/10 things you do won't require that extra bump. The difference in gaming is beyond minimal, hell even the difference between a ssd and and platter disk drive would be better for most games than the extra ram.

And before you calim im not knowledgeable enough or can't possibly know this, all my local friends bought pc's around the same time as me, simmilar specs between us, and iv used all their machines and the only noticeable difference was when i fucked around in photoshop. Sure to purists who can tell the difference between 59 fps and 60fps it might make a difference, but to the rest of us it really doesn't matter.
I wish I'd understood that when building my PC.

I need to get an SSD as it's really the only way to, cost effectively, improve my PC.

Sure, I could get more RAM or a better GPU but the gains/$ are less.