Question:
Need help with computer parts. Self build?
Finn
2012-12-25 02:59:24 UTC
Hey, so I am building my own computer and need some advice on the parts I have selected for it. I want to know if these parts are compatible and are of good quality.

The parts I have chosen are:
Processor: Intel 3rd Generation Core i5-3570K CPU (4 x 3.40GHz, Ivy Bridge, Socket 1155, 6Mb L3 Cache, Intel Turbo Boost Technology 2.0)

Motherboard: Asus P8Z77-V LX Motherboard (Socket 1155, 32GB DDR3 Support, ATX, Intel Z77 Express, USB 3.0, CrossFireX Support, Dual Intelligent Processors 3)

RAM: Corsair CMZ8GX3M2A1600C9B 8GB 1600Mhz CL9 DDR3 Vengeance Memory Module Kit

Case: Antec Nine Hundred Two V3 Black Steel ATX Mid Tower Gaming Case

Power: OCZ ZT Series 750W Fully-Modular 80PLUS Bronze High Performance Power Supply compatible with Intel Sandy Bridge Core i3 i5 i7 and AMD Phenom

CD/DVD drive: Asus DRW-24B5ST SATA Black 24x DVDRW Retail box

Internal hard drive: Western Digital Black Edition 1TB 64M Cache 3.5" Internal SATA3 HDD ( Dual Controllers to process onboard data , The Best Performance ) 5 Year Warranty

Graphics card: GIGABYTE GV-N660OC-2GD GeForce GTX 660 2GB 192-bit GDDR5 PCI Express 3.0 x16 HDCP Ready SLI Support Video Card

I have not added a monitor or other accessories to the list because I have already chosen them. Any advice is really helpful.
Three answers:
I=-1^1/2
2012-12-26 04:08:03 UTC
I have a lot of critizations:



CPU: Fine for gaming, sucks if you also want to edit. For editing, go AMD FX because those have better FPUs and handle multithreaded applications (including BF3 or Crysis 2) like biests



MOBO: Asus' quality sucks as I see on forums a lot of broken ones and I've received some sucky ones too. I would get an Asrock Z77 Extreme3. The Asus one has unheatsinked vrms which is not good for a i5 but the Asrock has heatsinked vrms and is phased 8+2+1. (Asus one is phased 4+1+1)



PSU: Waaaaay overkill, a 500w is more than enough if it's made by reputable manufacturer like Seasonic, Antec, Corsair, XFX or Rosewill. (not OCZ)



GPU: A 660 gets beaten by a 7870 (which costs less) when using the latest 12.11 drivers. Note that most benchmarks are outdated. Here's one which isn't:



http://www.techpowerup.com/reviews/AMD/Catalyst_12.11_Performance/13.html



Hope this helped :)
tullier
2016-08-08 19:51:35 UTC
The elements you have chosen Are lovely good! But i'd endorse to vary You pix Card To GTX 660Ti images Card alternatively Of 660! That would Be 30-forty% better Than 660 In Gaming! And All parts Are suitable With every different and alter Your power give To Corsair TX850 Or Above, so that you could support SLI Which Your Motherboard helps! It is going to support You including New photographs Card in a while! Don't simply construct A laptop Make It Futureproof!
Peter
2012-12-25 03:10:37 UTC
OK I'm not going to do your research for you, but here's a tip:

-Don't skimp on the case or the cooling system. Make sure the case will have more air being sucked in than being pushed out. That way all the cracks and crevices will push air out and not allow dust to drift in. All the intake fans should have dust filters. You can make your own dust filters with a piece of pantyhose.

-Solid state drives are amazing if you can afford one.

-Your list looks good at a glance.


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