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Posted: October 1st, 2007, 15:25
by MrGreen
I can really recommend the E6750, I've just build one with a P5B (and no, they didn't play nice) and it's pretty much ridiculously fast.

EDIT* Yup, 1M on Super Pi @ 19 seconds

Posted: October 1st, 2007, 15:32
by Dr. kitteny berk
MrGreen wrote:I can really recommend the E6750, I've just build one with a P5B (and no, they didn't play nice) and it's pretty much ridiculously fast.

EDIT* Yup, 1M on Super Pi @ 19 seconds
Q6600, Wprime, 32M... 19 seconds. :)

Posted: October 1st, 2007, 15:35
by Stoat
Well, I've ordered the bits, I just have to hope they'll fit in to one of my many aging cases.

I'm doing some benchmarking now :)
This PC can open a 111MB PSD in PS6 in 42 seconds (as opposed to 2.5 minutes on the laptop). I can't wait to see what the new one can do...

edit: 1M on Super Pi @ 43 seconds

Posted: October 3rd, 2007, 20:49
by TezzRexx
Dr. kitteny berk wrote:First go:

Mobo: Asus P5B-Plus Fista Edition £82.24
Cpu: Intel Core 2 Duo E6600 £131.59
Memory: 2GB (2x1GB) CorsairTwinX XMS2, DDR2 PC2-6400 £64.20
GPU: 320MB EVGA 8800GTS, PCI-E (x16), Mem 1600MHz, GPU 500MHz £179.99
HDD: 400GB Western Digital Caviar SE, SATA300 £49.69
DVD: Samsung 20x DVD±R Black OEM £18.67
PSU: 520W Corsair HX Series Modular PSU £64.50
Case: Antec P182 Advanced £78.48

Total: £695.09

Places to skimp would be on the GPU and CPU I think, As both are easily upgradable.

Downside is that DDR3 is taking over from DDR2, and no-one is totally sure when the next nvidia gpus are gonna appear.
Would a 400w PSU power this spec? I'm considering getting this for a new rig and would like to save money where possible and if a 400w PSU would do the job, that would please me greatly.

Posted: October 3rd, 2007, 20:56
by Dr. kitteny berk
A good quality 400w psu should be ok with that.

Posted: October 3rd, 2007, 21:15
by TezzRexx
cheers berk :)

Posted: October 3rd, 2007, 21:20
by Dr. kitteny berk
Any of the specs in this thread shouldn't break 350W, even with a few extra hdds. (as a note, i'd take stoat's spec, with either the memory he chose, or faster, then add the stuff in from the one you quoted)

However, it's always best to have some overhead on a psu. (but you should be fine if your psu is decent)

Posted: October 3rd, 2007, 21:48
by buzzmong
Antec P182 case, be warned, you NEED a modular power pack, and will probably have to move the 120mm fan from down the bottom.

Also, remove the bloody slidy tray thingie, it's a waste of time.

That said, I've got the 620w version of that modular corsair psu, 'tis a good psu. I'm using 3 of the modular connectors out of 8. :lol:

Posted: October 3rd, 2007, 21:50
by FatherJack
Dr. kitteny berk wrote:Any of the specs in this thread shouldn't break 350W, even with a few extra hdds. (as a note, i'd take stoat's spec, with either the memory he chose, or faster, then add the stuff in from the one you quoted)

However, it's always best to have some overhead on a psu. (but you should be fine if your psu is decent)
Yep, we've said it lots before, but quality>>quantity when it comes to PSUs, so I thought I'd reiterate it for new viewers to this thread.

Buy a decent, known make of PSU at least adequate for your anticipated power needs plus a bit, and it will serve you longer than most any other component in your PC. Skimp anywhere else but here - poor PSUs break expensive components, but good ones give you confidence and reliability. Remember that USB devices leech your power, too.

Posted: October 3rd, 2007, 21:59
by TezzRexx
Will do :D

also, is this what Stoat was suggesting? - http://www.scan.co.uk/Products/ProductI ... tID=255300

Posted: October 4th, 2007, 1:39
by Killavodka
You can skimp a bit more on the case too, the 900 is a beautiful case but
really you can spend half that and it will still do the job (even if you have to
file a bit out it to fit your GPU in :lol: )

Posted: October 4th, 2007, 2:54
by HereComesPete
Dr. kitteny berk wrote:
Q6600, Wprime, 32M... 19 seconds. :)

The q6600 go is out berk, cooler, uses less power and for some strabge reason is £5 pound less than the standardq6600 on ebuyer, silly ebuyer. You know you want one. :P

Posted: October 4th, 2007, 6:54
by Dr. kitteny berk
TezzRexx wrote:Will do :D

also, is this what Stoat was suggesting? - http://www.scan.co.uk/Products/ProductI ... tID=255300
Yup

Posted: October 5th, 2007, 10:09
by TezzRexx
Blarf, I was just about to order all my shiz together when scan the fuckers, removed the 320MB EVGA 8800GTS from their site :x

So, i'm looking at this one from ebuyer but the fact it's cheaper and says "superclocked" scares me, wut do i do. - http://www.ebuyer.com/product/125117

Posted: October 5th, 2007, 10:16
by Dr. kitteny berk
Buy it.

It's faster. this is good.

Posted: October 5th, 2007, 10:20
by TezzRexx
Whin, I also took everyone's advice and got a new Corsair 400w PSU 8D

Posted: October 5th, 2007, 18:43
by HereComesPete
TezzRexx wrote:stuff...
..."superclocked" scares me, wut do i do.
It's factory clocked, so if they send it screaming with barely tethered rage, and it breaks free, then you get a whole new beast courtesy of their rma.

Posted: October 5th, 2007, 21:09
by FatherJack
Yep, plus they generally have better than standard fans. It is a multiwin combination.

Posted: October 9th, 2007, 14:55
by TezzRexx
Well the parts arrived today and I'm getting the machine set up - however the manual of the motherboard (sometimes they are needed :lol:) keeps telling me to apply thermal grease to the heatsink (which shows pictures of the heatsink and fan combo i have), yet the Intel CPU manual doesn't mention it at all.

What do you guys reckon? Do I need it? It seems pretty cheap.

Posted: October 9th, 2007, 14:59
by Dr. kitteny berk
look at base of intel heatsink.

does it have a slice (or few stripes) of grey crap on it?

If so, that's heatsink goo and you don't need heatsink goo.

(in short: probably ignore the manual on that point)