Thanks for that :)
Let's review that then...
Processor:
f the rig is primarily for gaming and you insist on not OCing, you may want to consider going 1156, for a few reasons. The i7 870 is priced the same as the 950 and in games edges it out slightly due to a higher Turbo Boost. It also has a lot lower power consumption and the 1156 MBs are more affordable too, esp if you go Crossfire only support instead of the ones that support SLI.
Don't get me wrong, the 950 is a beautiful chip and actually performs better in many synthetic benches where it's more advanced (eg: QPI) architecture is used more thoroughly, but honestly if you're buying it just for gaming and only using stock speeds the 870 would be better.
It will not be primarily for gaming. If it was just that, I'd probably be better off getting a HD5870 and replace my current card. And maybe an SSD. Cheapest option, and probably effective too. I've actually considered it. However, there's photography in there also, which I'd like to speed up. And that's where raw processing power comes in. By the way, the 950 goes at €469, while the 870 is €499. So the 870 is in fact slightly more expensive, while running at a lower clock speed. How much will the two processors differ for photo/video editing?
950 stock cooler, well, I could agree. I've always plugged in a Zalman so far with my current builds, since they're not all that expensive compared to the rest of the rig. But I can see how it's overkill when not OCing. Big question though: is it a bit quiet? Not that my current cooler has much of that mind you...
As for overclocking, I've never done it before and I just think it's scary to do tbh. Then again, once running I suppose I'd be just fine. Preferably not though.
Firewire:
As I mentioned already, I doubt any of these boards will be available at all. So the a-version will do.
Case:
The Thermaltake Element S looks very interesting indeed. Goes at €129 at Alternate (windowed version, the other's €119). Only the appearance would need some getting used to I think, but practicality seems very good. Especially the SSD slots. I currently have a whole 1 5,25" slot in use, so I don't think 3 will be too few. Big fans = little noise, yay :D
Cooler:
Unfortunately, the Prolimatech Megahalem seems unavailable at Alternate. This is the full list of what they have:
Click
Any of those worth it, or shall I just stick to stock cooling?
MoBo:
The gigabyte EX58-UD5 (€229) looks quite interesting, but also seems like overkill. I have no need for 3x PCIe 16x, one will do. Also, two network inputs? Well, I suppose I could find some kind of use for that eventually, but one would do as well. Then I looked at the slightly cheaper EX58-UD3R (€169), only to find that it has only 4 DDR slots, thus probably doesn't do triple channel properly. Or does it? Oh, there it is, DDR3 - 1333 max, while I already chose DDR3 - 1600 up there :roll:
Seems the UD5 only does one DIMM per channel only at that speed:
Compatibility list. So there won't be any upgrading.
I think it'll be safe to assume the chosen memory will work, right?
PSU:
Hmmm... tricky one. So you think 600W will pull all this? Because it would sure save some money. But how wise is it to get a whole new system and run it on an older PSU?
Anyway, the
Corsair CMPSU-850HX would run me €145, but ouch, does it have a lot of connectors! But I suppose you need 6 of the PCIe connectors if you're ever going into 3 video cards ;). Something I don't see myself doing by the way. Efficiency seems pretty high - and that's good. I prefer having a bit of leftover power on the PSU side. Better safe than sorry.
This calculator recommends 504W, based on a 4870X2. The 5870 requires less juice, correct? So 600W should be pretty sufficient. Hmmm... might stick with what I have after all... ahh, toughest choice of all I think :lol:
I think that for now I'll stick with all new components, with plenty of leftover power, thus the Corsair 850W. Just in case I decide to overclock after all one day, or expand with extra GPUs, or something like that ;)
Right then, the current status for my system build:
New:
- Thermaltake Element S - €129
- Corsair 850HX - €145
- Gigabyte EX58-UD5 - €229
- Intel Core i7 950 / stock cooling - €469
- Corsair 6Gb DDR3-1600 Tri-kit - €119
- Sapphire Radeon HD 5870 1GB - €369
- Intel SSD(s) X25-M G2, 160GB total - ~€400
- Windows 7. Haven't fully decided on the version yet. OEM will probably run me about €100-150.
From current build:
- Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi Elite Pro
- DVD drive
- 300GB SATA harddisk. I think it's a Maxtor.
- Logitech G9 mouse, G15 keyboard, joystick, gamepad, printer, scanner, monitors etc. etc.
_________________________________________
- Total price: ~€2000
Ouch. But I'll be hoping it's going to last for more years than my last builds. In fact, my current one's outliving its predecessor. And tech is moving up pretty slowly these days. I'm expecting it to last at least 3-4 years. And by then I'll have my own house probably, i.e. no money for big upgrades, so it'd better last!
Also, I'm expecting price drops before I actually build the thing - especially on the SSDs. So it might not turn out as bad as it seems :)
Anything I forgot? Any terrible mistakes I'm still making?
Sorry for the long read :oops: