In this guide, I will show you every part in a computer, which ones to get, and which ones not to get. I hope for a sticky, but my hopes are not too high.
*All pricing from PCPartPicker
Processor or CPU
The CPU, or central processing unit, does the majority of the work for the computer. Processors have two brand names, intel and AMD. Though there are only two brands, there is a bounty of sockets. The processor must correspond with the socket of the motherboard to work. CPUs have two distinguishing specifications. Cores, essentially multiple processors on the same die, can take on more tasks at once. More cores doesn't mean better performance. Many games and programs don't use more than 2 cores at once. Buy 4 cores or more for intensive tasks like engineering software, modeling software, video editing etc. The other specification is clock speed. This tells you very little when comparing two different CPUs. 3GHz for an Intel Ivy Bridge is different than 3GHz for an Intel Sandybridge or AMD Piledriver. Most processors are clocked reasonably. Just skip over it. Note: you can raise the clock speed for modest gains in performance, depending on the processor.
Information of each company:
Intel: Their most recent line is the Ivy Bridge line, or the third generation i series processors. Ivy Bridge CPU's use the socket type LGA 1155 and utilize the chipsets H67, P67, Z68, Z77, and a few other obscure ones.
Highly recommended processors are
Intel Pentium G620 Sandy Bridge (Dual Core) $78
Intel Pentium G620T Sandy Bridge (Dual Core) $83
Intel Pentium G840 Sandy Bridge (Dual Core) $87
Intel Pentium G850 Sandy Bridge (Dual core) $85
Intel Pentium G870 Sandy Bridge (Dual Core)
i3 2100 (Dual core with hyperthreading) $125
i5 2500 (Quad core) $210
i5 2500K (Quad core) $220
i7 2600 (Quad core with hyperthreading) $305
i7 2600K (Quad core with hyperthreading) $315
i5 3750K (Quad core)
i7 3770K (Quad Core with HT)
K meaning that it is possible to overclock past 400 Mhz.
AMD: AMD fills the gap of moderately priced CPUs. Their most recently released CPUs are called Piledriver. They have fantastic price to performance.
Recommended CPUs by AMD:
FX-4300 (Quadcore) $120
FX-6300 (Hexacore) $130
FX-8320 (Octocore) $175
FX-8350 (Octocore) $190
(Don't be fooled by more cores. If you're a gamer, the 4300 will suffice, but considering the 6300's price, you might as well spring for that)
Motherboards
Motherboards are the middleman of the computer. The motherboard is the house, and the other components are the people inside, so to say. Again, there are two motherboards, AMD and intel. As said in the CPU portion, they must match sockets with the CPU to work. Getting a Motherboard with plenty of features is very important. Having the ability to go SLI/X-Fire is very nice to have. Overclocking might also be a deciding factor. Keep in mind the chipset, which tells you what your motherboard can and can't do, essentially. For intel, the most recent line up that supports ivy bridge (and legacy 1155 CPUs) are H77 (basic motherboard, no overclocking) and Z77 (allows overclocking). They closed the gap in featuers fairly well with the newer chipsets. More details can be found here. The basic AMD chipset line for Piledriver is the 9xx series. Look here for details. They are all fairly similar.
Video card is probably an important part of a computer because this is a forum with games. Video cards allow for graphics to load faster, ergo, higher FPS. Video cards also have VRAM, standing for Video RAM. 1GB is usually good for a single monitor set up. In a multiple monitor setup, 2GB+ does come in handy. There are two brands, both are very good. AMD and Nvidia. AMDs latest line is the 7000 series. Nvidias latest line is the 600 series. AMD has crossfire that can support up to 4 graphics cards. AMD also has eyefinity that allows for up to 6 monitors, thats if you have 6 monitors and enough ports. Nvidia has SLI that allows for 4 GPUs. Nvidia has 3D capabilities and Phys-X. AMD is currently well regarded for their price to performance.
The most important part you can choose. This powers your whole computer, and if you buy a bad one, it takes all the parts down with it. Getting a high quality PSU is key. You also must know what wattage to get, and if that PSU actually uses that wattage. Some are low quality and use less wattage than stated. You can use a PSU calculator to help you out.
PSUs:
Seasonic M12D series
Seasonic S12D Series
Seasonic X series (if you have the money)
Corsiar HX Series
Silverstone Strider Plus Series
Silverstone Strider Gold Series
XFX Core Edition
Sentey Gold Steel Power 850W
NZXT HALE90
RAM
RAM stands for random access memory. Ram allows for the CPU to quickly access data in use. Ram takes information from the hard drive to cut down time for the CPU. The standard is 4GB. There is also dual channel and triple channel memory, corresponding to the motherboard. Two sticks of ram, comparable to one, is a lot faster. I recommend at least 2x2GB. If you are a video editor, I would recommend 2x4GB, it speeds up video rendering a lot. There is also different types of ram. DDR3 is on all current motherboards. Also 240 pin is on all current motherboards. Refer to the glossary for these terms. The speed of the ram should be 1333Mhz, high speed ram (eg. 1600 MHz) hardly makes a difference in real time. Heat sinks are not required either, and can save you money if you buy ones without them. Timings, 5 or 4 numbers with dashed in between, are defined in clock cycles. The represent the different latencies that can have an affect on the speed of a computer. The tighter the timings, the better. Here are 3 sections for different types of people:
Non Overclocker:
DDR3 1333Mhz
No heatsinks
9-9-9-24
Mid Overclocker:
DDR3 1333Mhz or 1600Mhz
Basic heatsink
8-8-8-24
High Overclocker:
DDR3 1333Mhz+
Advanced Heatsink (eg. Ripjaws X)
8-8-8-24 or better.
HDD
HDD stands for Hard Disk Drive. It stores information and is one of the only parts in a computer that moves (optical drive and fans move). 1TB is a good amount of space and 7200 RPM(rotations per minute)is a good speed. There is 2 types of drives I would recommend, SATA II and SATA III. SATA II is 3GB/second and SATA III is 6GB/second. SATA drives are compatible with each other, meaning each drive will work in each slot. However, if you plugin a SATA III drive in a SATA II slot, it will only perform at SATA II speeds.
Popular HDDs:
Samsung F3 Spinpoint 1TB 7,200RPM SATA II $65
Western Digital Caviar Black 500GB 7,200RPM SATA III $60
Seagate Barracuda 1TB 7,200 RPM SATA III $65
Any GB variation of these drives will do, long as the other specs stay the same. HDD prices are up, I recommend you stay away until the prices go back down, try and salvage an HDD and buy an SSD
Case
Cases reflect who you are and are very important. But you must choose carefully. Cases should, first, have good cooling. Heat brings death to components, and fans keep them cool. Second, cable management. It makes your case nice and neat, and improves air flow. Third, tool less installation, this makes your job a whole lot easier.
SSD's are similar to HDD's in the fact that they store data. However, they are smaller, use non moving parts, and are much faster. They are also more expensive. SSD's speeds are measured by their read and write times, and MTBF. MTBF stands for mean time between failures. The higher these numbers the better. High read and write times show how fast the drive is. High MTBF means that there is less mistakes. SSD's are used a lot as boot drives. People put their OS and other important software on the SSD. As a boot drive, 60 GB is more than enough for your OS and other programs. SSD's are only for people with a big enough budget. By no means, should you get an SSD if you're budget is low. These are some of the best drives on the market for the money:
SSDs:
Crucial M4 (Good boot drive, amazing read times, lower than average write times)
Patriot Pyro
Corsair Force 3/GT
Mushkin Enhanced Chronos
Corsiar Performance Pro
Intel 330 Series
Intel 520 Series
Samsung 830 series
OCZ Vertex 4
Plextor M3
Corsair Neutron
Corsair Neutron GTX
Optical Drive
Optical drives are pretty simple. They simply read, and sometimes write, disks. These are necessary if you are booting windows 7 from the disk. But, you don't need an expensive one. Most optical drives on the market are fast and don't need to be more expensive than $20 dollars with shipping. I can't give you any specific models. Just get whats cheapest on whatever site you are ordering from.
Monitor
Monitors are tricky ones, they are. The standard resolution is 1920x1080p. Monitors run at cycles of 60 Hz and that is as fast they will go. 3D monitors are 120 Hz. Monitors are measured in size from one corner to the other. The amount of pixels vertical is usually considered the monitors resolution. A 1080p monitor has 1080 pixels from top to bottom. 1920 is the amount of horizontal pixels. The "p" at the end of 1080p means how the monitor refreshes. "p" stands for progressive, because it progressively refreshes the pixels. There is also "i", which stands for interlaced. Interlaced does all the odd lines and then all the evens. Many people prefer "p" monitors over "i" There is also monitors that have LED back lights. LED back lights are very useful, because when viewing a LCD monitor without them, its similar to low light reading. You should also consider an IPS model, if affordable. IPS monitors have enhanced viewing angles, when calibrated. They look absolutely stunning. Here are some monitors:
Monitors:
NEC EA232wmi (IPS, 1920x1080p, 23") ~$300
Dell U2410 (IPS ,1920x1200, 24") ~$400
ASUS ML239H Black (IPS, 1920x1080p, 23") $250
Dell U2211h (IPS, 1920x1080p, 21.5") ~$200
ASUS VS228H-P (1920x1080p, 21.5")~$150
Dell U2312HM (IPS, 1920x1080p, 23")~$300
ASUS PA238Q (1920x1080p, 23")~$270
Dell U2412M (IPS, 1920x1200p, 24")~$370
If you can't afford any of these, Acer makes some nice and cheap models. Just make sure its a reasonable size and its 1920x1080p.
Glossary
CPU: Computer Processing Unit. Processes tasks given out. RAM: Random Access Memory. Memory that holds information that needs to be used by the CPU quickly Overclocking: Pushing a component or components past what they were meant to do. Most people do CPU overclocking, RAM overclocking, and video card overclocking. Socket type: The position of pins on the motherboard or CPU, depending on whether its an intel or AMD, that corresponds with the pads on the opposite part. eg. LGA 1155 CPU can only fit in a LGA 1155 motherboard Clock speed: How fast a CPU can process information. Clock speed = FSB * multiplier. FSB: Front Side Bus. This is the base amount of Mhz that is multiplied by the multiplier to get the clock speed. Multiplier: A number that affects the FSB to get the clock speed. CPU Cache: Small amounts of memory stored on the CPU to make accessing ram quicker. There is a L1 cache, L2 cache, and on most CPU's today there is a L3 cache, each are different in ways I can't even explain. If you want to know more, look at the wikipedia. K/Black edition processors: CPU's that have a fully unlocked multiplier. SLI: The two or three way set up for nVidia graphics cards to work in sync. Cross Fire: The two to four way set up for AMD graphics cards to work in sync. Chipset: A group of circuits that control the flow of data on a motherboard. Motherboard: A thin board that links all the other components of the computer. Video Card: A designated card specifically meant for the processing of graphics. Eyefinity: AMD's graphics cards ability to have up to six monitors PhysX: Nvidia's solution to offloading physical calculations. Wattage: the amount of power in a PSU. Rail: A wire in a PSU that supplies volts to the computer. DDR3: The latest and greatest type of ram. Only works with motherboards that support DDR3, which is almost all new ones. Latencies: The amount of time between the ram being told to access data and when it is ready to be outputted. Ram clock speed: The cycle speed doubled, measured in MHz. HDD: Hard Drive Disk. Stores data and is one of the only moving parts in a computer SATA Serial ATA. 3 types. I, II, and III. III is the most current and is 6.0GB/s Mid tower: Moderately sized case. Full Tower: Bigger than average case. SSD: Solid State Drive. Stores data, and is faster, and more expensive, than traditional drives. IPS: In-panel switching. Enhances viewing angles of monitor. LED: Creates viewing a monitor easier on the eyes. Resolution: The amount of horizontal pixels by the vertical pixels followed by the refresh pattern. eg. 1920x1080p p: The refresh pattern of a monitor that updates pixels as it goes. i: The refresh pattern of a monitor that updates the odd, than the even lines of pixels. More Definitions to Come!
wut is this for? just a little guide on computer setups? or computer setups for minecraft? if it is for minecrafr could you list some stuff best for minecraft for a custom build?
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Scariest thing in the universe...... Weeping Angels
When this is completed it deserves to be stickyed. Well done. Although i suggest you add prices to the items you listed to make it easier for people to get a perspective.
When this is completed it deserves to be stickyed. Well done. Although i suggest you add prices to the items you listed to make it easier for people to get a perspective.
Okay, I stopped for know because i'm hot, sweaty, and tired. I will finish up tomorrow.
When this is completed it deserves to be stickyed. Well done. Although i suggest you add prices to the items you listed to make it easier for people to get a perspective.
Yes I agree. Like for example with cases, on the BF3 forums someone wanted a list of good mid-tower cases. I gave like like 5 suggestions with price increments. Like
Corsair obsidian 650D-$200
Corsair Graphite 600T-$160
Xigmatek Pantheon-$120
CoolerMaster CM690 II-$100
CoolerMaster Haf912-$60
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
Vincenzo wrote:
I don't have a birthday. I ripped open my mom's stomach with my bare hands after only 3 months into the pregnancy. I slapped the nurse's ass, then I strutted out that hospital. LIKE. A. MAN
Okay, I stopped for know because i'm hot, sweaty, and tired. I will finish up tomorrow.
:blink.gif:
Rollback Post to RevisionRollBack
Vincenzo wrote:
I don't have a birthday. I ripped open my mom's stomach with my bare hands after only 3 months into the pregnancy. I slapped the nurse's ass, then I strutted out that hospital. LIKE. A. MAN
Vincenzo wrote:
I don't have a birthday. I ripped open my mom's stomach with my bare hands after only 3 months into the pregnancy. I slapped the nurse's ass, then I strutted out that hospital. LIKE. A. MAN
It's pretty late where I am, so i will finish this up in the morning. Current goals:
Finish Ram
Finish HDD
Do the optical drive section
Do the monitor section
Try and fill up the glossary with enough terms to make a noob understand computers
Add pricing.
Add notes recommending parts for certain tasks
K meaning that it is possible to overclock past 4000 Mhz.
Not being a bug or anything, but isn't 4Ghz equal to 4000MHz? Not 400MHz? Just something you might want ti fix up, since this could confuse a lot of newbies.
Not being a bug or anything, but isn't 4Ghz equal to 4000MHz? Not 400MHz? Just something you might want ti fix up, since this could confuse a lot of newbies.
No, I meant give the processor an additional 400MHz, I will fix the wording in the morning.
Not being a bug or anything, but isn't 4Ghz equal to 4000MHz? Not 400MHz? Just something you might want ti fix up, since this could confuse a lot of newbies.
Nope, the 400MHz was correct. The non-K processors can only be overclocked by increasing the multiplier 4 times higher than the max it can go, and that is it. So if it is at 32x at stock, you can only max it to 36x
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Windows 7 | Core i5 2500k | Patriot 8GB | HD 6870 | Capstone 450 | Z68ITX-A-E | Barracuda LP 2TB | Chronos 120GB | Lian Li PC-Q08B
Ultrasharp U2211H | Klipsch ProMedia 2.1 Klipsch S4 | RAT 9 | Das Keyboard
Nope, the 400MHz was correct. The non-K processors can only be overclocked by increasing the multiplier 4 times higher than the max it can go, and that is it. So if it is at 32x at stock, you can only max it to 36x
Oh, I thought he was meaning like the i5 2500K can overclock past 4GHz... My bad.
Good job with this guide :smile.gif: Few changes might be good to do.
For the recommended parts you could separate them to low/mid/high(overclocking) budgets.
For the ram section, it should be good to atleast mention something about latencies. That's what people wonder many times. For normal user 9-9-9-24 ram is good and does its job well. But for higher budget person that want's to overclock his computer, timings should be better so that they can be loosen if needed.
[center]A guide to the parts in a computer[/center]
In this guide, I will show you every part in a computer, which ones to get, and which ones not to get. I hope for a sticky, but my hopes are not too high.
[center]
Intel:
MSI P67A-G45 (Chipset: P67, Socket: LGA1155, SLI and X-Fire Compatible)
ASRock P67 Extreme4 (Chipset: P67, Socket: LGA 1155, SLI and X-Fire Compatible)
ASUS P8P67 Pro (Chipset: P67, Socket: LGA 1155, SLI and X-Fire compatible)
ASRock Z68 Extreme4 (Chipset: Z68, Socket: LGA 1155, SLI and X-Fire Compatible)
AMD:
No specific models, AM3+ is the best one to get, allows for more upgrades.
EEEEEW!!! MSI, ASRock? How can THAT be recommended?
In this guide, I will show you every part in a computer, which ones to get, and which ones not to get. I hope for a sticky, but my hopes are not too high.
*All pricing from PCPartPicker
The CPU, or central processing unit, does the majority of the work for the computer. Processors have two brand names, intel and AMD. Though there are only two brands, there is a bounty of sockets. The processor must correspond with the socket of the motherboard to work. CPUs have two distinguishing specifications. Cores, essentially multiple processors on the same die, can take on more tasks at once. More cores doesn't mean better performance. Many games and programs don't use more than 2 cores at once. Buy 4 cores or more for intensive tasks like engineering software, modeling software, video editing etc. The other specification is clock speed. This tells you very little when comparing two different CPUs. 3GHz for an Intel Ivy Bridge is different than 3GHz for an Intel Sandybridge or AMD Piledriver. Most processors are clocked reasonably. Just skip over it. Note: you can raise the clock speed for modest gains in performance, depending on the processor.
Information of each company:
Intel: Their most recent line is the Ivy Bridge line, or the third generation i series processors. Ivy Bridge CPU's use the socket type LGA 1155 and utilize the chipsets H67, P67, Z68, Z77, and a few other obscure ones.
Highly recommended processors are
Intel Pentium G620 Sandy Bridge (Dual Core) $78
Intel Pentium G620T Sandy Bridge (Dual Core) $83
Intel Pentium G840 Sandy Bridge (Dual Core) $87
Intel Pentium G850 Sandy Bridge (Dual core) $85
Intel Pentium G870 Sandy Bridge (Dual Core)
i3 2100 (Dual core with hyperthreading) $125
i5 2500 (Quad core) $210
i5 2500K (Quad core) $220
i7 2600 (Quad core with hyperthreading) $305
i7 2600K (Quad core with hyperthreading) $315
i5 3750K (Quad core)
i7 3770K (Quad Core with HT)
K meaning that it is possible to overclock past 400 Mhz.
AMD: AMD fills the gap of moderately priced CPUs. Their most recently released CPUs are called Piledriver. They have fantastic price to performance.
Recommended CPUs by AMD:
FX-4300 (Quadcore) $120
FX-6300 (Hexacore) $130
FX-8320 (Octocore) $175
FX-8350 (Octocore) $190
(Don't be fooled by more cores. If you're a gamer, the 4300 will suffice, but considering the 6300's price, you might as well spring for that)
Motherboards are the middleman of the computer. The motherboard is the house, and the other components are the people inside, so to say. Again, there are two motherboards, AMD and intel. As said in the CPU portion, they must match sockets with the CPU to work. Getting a Motherboard with plenty of features is very important. Having the ability to go SLI/X-Fire is very nice to have. Overclocking might also be a deciding factor. Keep in mind the chipset, which tells you what your motherboard can and can't do, essentially. For intel, the most recent line up that supports ivy bridge (and legacy 1155 CPUs) are H77 (basic motherboard, no overclocking) and Z77 (allows overclocking). They closed the gap in featuers fairly well with the newer chipsets. More details can be found here. The basic AMD chipset line for Piledriver is the 9xx series. Look here for details. They are all fairly similar.
Intel:
MSI Z77A-G45 (Chipset: Z77, Socket: LGA1155, SLI and X-Fire Compatible) $100
Gigabye Z77-UD3-B3 (Chipset: Z68, Socket: LGA 1155, SLI and X-Fire Compatible) $136
ASRock Z77 Extreme4 Gen3 (Chipset: Z77, Socket: LGA 1155, SLI and X-Fire Compatible) $130
Gigabyte Z77A-D3H-B3 (Chipset: Z77, Socket: LGA 1155, SLI and X-Fire Compatible) $115
AMD:
Gigabyte 990XA-UD3 (Chipset: 990X, Socket: AM3+, SLI and X-Fire Compatible) $120
ASRock 970 Extreme4 (Chipset: 970, Socket: AM3+)
MSI 990FXA-GD65v2 (Chipset: 990FXA, Socket: AM3+, SLI and X-Fire compatible) $120
Video card is probably an important part of a computer because this is a forum with games. Video cards allow for graphics to load faster, ergo, higher FPS. Video cards also have VRAM, standing for Video RAM. 1GB is usually good for a single monitor set up. In a multiple monitor setup, 2GB+ does come in handy. There are two brands, both are very good. AMD and Nvidia. AMDs latest line is the 7000 series. Nvidias latest line is the 600 series. AMD has crossfire that can support up to 4 graphics cards. AMD also has eyefinity that allows for up to 6 monitors, thats if you have 6 monitors and enough ports. Nvidia has SLI that allows for 4 GPUs. Nvidia has 3D capabilities and Phys-X. AMD is currently well regarded for their price to performance.
AMD:
Radeon 7770 $120
Radeon 7790 $140
Radeon 7850 $170
Radeon 7870 $210
Radeon 7950 $310
Radeon 7970 $400
Nvidia:
GTX 650 Ti Boost $170
GTX 660 $200
GTX 660Ti $310
GTX 670 $400
GTX 680 $500
The most important part you can choose. This powers your whole computer, and if you buy a bad one, it takes all the parts down with it. Getting a high quality PSU is key. You also must know what wattage to get, and if that PSU actually uses that wattage. Some are low quality and use less wattage than stated. You can use a PSU calculator to help you out.
PSUs:
Seasonic M12D series
Seasonic S12D Series
Seasonic X series (if you have the money)
Corsiar HX Series
Silverstone Strider Plus Series
Silverstone Strider Gold Series
XFX Core Edition
Sentey Gold Steel Power 850W
NZXT HALE90
RAM stands for random access memory. Ram allows for the CPU to quickly access data in use. Ram takes information from the hard drive to cut down time for the CPU. The standard is 4GB. There is also dual channel and triple channel memory, corresponding to the motherboard. Two sticks of ram, comparable to one, is a lot faster. I recommend at least 2x2GB. If you are a video editor, I would recommend 2x4GB, it speeds up video rendering a lot. There is also different types of ram. DDR3 is on all current motherboards. Also 240 pin is on all current motherboards. Refer to the glossary for these terms. The speed of the ram should be 1333Mhz, high speed ram (eg. 1600 MHz) hardly makes a difference in real time. Heat sinks are not required either, and can save you money if you buy ones without them. Timings, 5 or 4 numbers with dashed in between, are defined in clock cycles. The represent the different latencies that can have an affect on the speed of a computer. The tighter the timings, the better. Here are 3 sections for different types of people:
Non Overclocker:
DDR3 1333Mhz
No heatsinks
9-9-9-24
Mid Overclocker:
DDR3 1333Mhz or 1600Mhz
Basic heatsink
8-8-8-24
High Overclocker:
DDR3 1333Mhz+
Advanced Heatsink (eg. Ripjaws X)
8-8-8-24 or better.
HDD stands for Hard Disk Drive. It stores information and is one of the only parts in a computer that moves (optical drive and fans move). 1TB is a good amount of space and 7200 RPM(rotations per minute)is a good speed. There is 2 types of drives I would recommend, SATA II and SATA III. SATA II is 3GB/second and SATA III is 6GB/second. SATA drives are compatible with each other, meaning each drive will work in each slot. However, if you plugin a SATA III drive in a SATA II slot, it will only perform at SATA II speeds.
Popular HDDs:
Samsung F3 Spinpoint 1TB 7,200RPM SATA II $65
Western Digital Caviar Black 500GB 7,200RPM SATA III $60
Seagate Barracuda 1TB 7,200 RPM SATA III $65
Any GB variation of these drives will do, long as the other specs stay the same.
HDD prices are up, I recommend you stay away until the prices go back down, try and salvage an HDD and buy an SSD
Cases reflect who you are and are very important. But you must choose carefully. Cases should, first, have good cooling. Heat brings death to components, and fans keep them cool. Second, cable management. It makes your case nice and neat, and improves air flow. Third, tool less installation, this makes your job a whole lot easier.
Cases I recommend:
CM HAF 912 (Mid tower) $60
CM HAF 922 (Mid tower) $110
CM HAF 932 (Full tower) $160
CM HAF X (Full tower) $200
CM HAF XM (Mid-Full Tower)
CM Storm Scout (Mid tower) $100
CM Storm Enforcer (Mid tower) $90
CM Storm Sniper (Mid tower) $160
NZXT Gamma (Mid tower, low budget) $50
MZXT Lexa S (Mid tower) $90
NZXT Tempest Evo (Mid tower) $120
NZXT Source 210 Elite (Mid Tower)
NZXT Switch 810 (Full Tower)
NZXT Phantom (Full tower) $140
Lancool K62 (Mid tower) $150
Lancool K63 (Mid tower) $130
Corsair 600T (Mid tower) $160
Corsair Carbide 400R (Mid Tower) $100
Corsair Carbide 500R (Mid Tower) $110
BitFenix Shinobi (Mid Tower)
Fractal Design R3 (Mid Tower)
SSD's are similar to HDD's in the fact that they store data. However, they are smaller, use non moving parts, and are much faster. They are also more expensive. SSD's speeds are measured by their read and write times, and MTBF. MTBF stands for mean time between failures. The higher these numbers the better. High read and write times show how fast the drive is. High MTBF means that there is less mistakes. SSD's are used a lot as boot drives. People put their OS and other important software on the SSD. As a boot drive, 60 GB is more than enough for your OS and other programs. SSD's are only for people with a big enough budget. By no means, should you get an SSD if you're budget is low. These are some of the best drives on the market for the money:
SSDs:
Crucial M4 (Good boot drive, amazing read times, lower than average write times)
Patriot Pyro
Corsair Force 3/GT
Mushkin Enhanced Chronos
Corsiar Performance Pro
Intel 330 Series
Intel 520 Series
Samsung 830 series
OCZ Vertex 4
Plextor M3
Corsair Neutron
Corsair Neutron GTX
Optical drives are pretty simple. They simply read, and sometimes write, disks. These are necessary if you are booting windows 7 from the disk. But, you don't need an expensive one. Most optical drives on the market are fast and don't need to be more expensive than $20 dollars with shipping. I can't give you any specific models. Just get whats cheapest on whatever site you are ordering from.
Monitors are tricky ones, they are. The standard resolution is 1920x1080p. Monitors run at cycles of 60 Hz and that is as fast they will go. 3D monitors are 120 Hz. Monitors are measured in size from one corner to the other. The amount of pixels vertical is usually considered the monitors resolution. A 1080p monitor has 1080 pixels from top to bottom. 1920 is the amount of horizontal pixels. The "p" at the end of 1080p means how the monitor refreshes. "p" stands for progressive, because it progressively refreshes the pixels. There is also "i", which stands for interlaced. Interlaced does all the odd lines and then all the evens. Many people prefer "p" monitors over "i" There is also monitors that have LED back lights. LED back lights are very useful, because when viewing a LCD monitor without them, its similar to low light reading. You should also consider an IPS model, if affordable. IPS monitors have enhanced viewing angles, when calibrated. They look absolutely stunning. Here are some monitors:
Monitors:
NEC EA232wmi (IPS, 1920x1080p, 23") ~$300
Dell U2410 (IPS ,1920x1200, 24") ~$400
ASUS ML239H Black (IPS, 1920x1080p, 23") $250
Dell U2211h (IPS, 1920x1080p, 21.5") ~$200
ASUS VS228H-P (1920x1080p, 21.5")~$150
Dell U2312HM (IPS, 1920x1080p, 23")~$300
ASUS PA238Q (1920x1080p, 23")~$270
Dell U2412M (IPS, 1920x1200p, 24")~$370
If you can't afford any of these, Acer makes some nice and cheap models. Just make sure its a reasonable size and its 1920x1080p.
RAM: Random Access Memory. Memory that holds information that needs to be used by the CPU quickly
Overclocking: Pushing a component or components past what they were meant to do. Most people do CPU overclocking, RAM overclocking, and video card overclocking.
Socket type: The position of pins on the motherboard or CPU, depending on whether its an intel or AMD, that corresponds with the pads on the opposite part. eg. LGA 1155 CPU can only fit in a LGA 1155 motherboard
Clock speed: How fast a CPU can process information. Clock speed = FSB * multiplier.
FSB: Front Side Bus. This is the base amount of Mhz that is multiplied by the multiplier to get the clock speed.
Multiplier: A number that affects the FSB to get the clock speed.
CPU Cache: Small amounts of memory stored on the CPU to make accessing ram quicker. There is a L1 cache, L2 cache, and on most CPU's today there is a L3 cache, each are different in ways I can't even explain. If you want to know more, look at the wikipedia.
K/Black edition processors: CPU's that have a fully unlocked multiplier.
SLI: The two or three way set up for nVidia graphics cards to work in sync.
Cross Fire: The two to four way set up for AMD graphics cards to work in sync.
Chipset: A group of circuits that control the flow of data on a motherboard.
Motherboard: A thin board that links all the other components of the computer.
Video Card: A designated card specifically meant for the processing of graphics.
Eyefinity: AMD's graphics cards ability to have up to six monitors
PhysX: Nvidia's solution to offloading physical calculations.
Wattage: the amount of power in a PSU.
Rail: A wire in a PSU that supplies volts to the computer.
DDR3: The latest and greatest type of ram. Only works with motherboards that support DDR3, which is almost all new ones.
Latencies: The amount of time between the ram being told to access data and when it is ready to be outputted.
Ram clock speed: The cycle speed doubled, measured in MHz.
HDD: Hard Drive Disk. Stores data and is one of the only moving parts in a computer
SATA Serial ATA. 3 types. I, II, and III. III is the most current and is 6.0GB/s
Mid tower: Moderately sized case.
Full Tower: Bigger than average case.
SSD: Solid State Drive. Stores data, and is faster, and more expensive, than traditional drives.
IPS: In-panel switching. Enhances viewing angles of monitor.
LED: Creates viewing a monitor easier on the eyes.
Resolution: The amount of horizontal pixels by the vertical pixels followed by the refresh pattern. eg. 1920x1080p
p: The refresh pattern of a monitor that updates pixels as it goes.
i: The refresh pattern of a monitor that updates the odd, than the even lines of pixels.
More Definitions to Come!
Thinking about coming a mod to simply not moderate.
Okay, I stopped for know because i'm hot, sweaty, and tired. I will finish up tomorrow.
Thinking about coming a mod to simply not moderate.
Yes I agree. Like for example with cases, on the BF3 forums someone wanted a list of good mid-tower cases. I gave like like 5 suggestions with price increments. Like
I don't have a birthday. I ripped open my mom's stomach with my bare hands after only 3 months into the pregnancy. I slapped the nurse's ass, then I strutted out that hospital. LIKE. A. MAN
:blink.gif:
I don't have a birthday. I ripped open my mom's stomach with my bare hands after only 3 months into the pregnancy. I slapped the nurse's ass, then I strutted out that hospital. LIKE. A. MAN
I live in southern California, give me a break.
Anyway, update:
*Organized CPU section
*Added information on RAM
*Added information on HDD
*Added the whole case section, missing a few details.
Thinking about coming a mod to simply not moderate.
But good work on the guide. It will sure help a lot of people new to the computer building scene.(As long as they look at the stickied posts.)
I don't have a birthday. I ripped open my mom's stomach with my bare hands after only 3 months into the pregnancy. I slapped the nurse's ass, then I strutted out that hospital. LIKE. A. MAN
Finish Ram
Finish HDD
Do the optical drive section
Do the monitor section
Try and fill up the glossary with enough terms to make a noob understand computers
Add pricing.
Add notes recommending parts for certain tasks
Thinking about coming a mod to simply not moderate.
Yeah, except a lot of their recommendations are crap.
Ultrasharp U2211H |
Klipsch ProMedia 2.1Klipsch S4 | RAT 9 | Das KeyboardNot being a bug or anything, but isn't 4Ghz equal to 4000MHz? Not 400MHz? Just something you might want ti fix up, since this could confuse a lot of newbies.
No, I meant give the processor an additional 400MHz, I will fix the wording in the morning.
Thinking about coming a mod to simply not moderate.
Nope, the 400MHz was correct. The non-K processors can only be overclocked by increasing the multiplier 4 times higher than the max it can go, and that is it. So if it is at 32x at stock, you can only max it to 36x
Ultrasharp U2211H |
Klipsch ProMedia 2.1Klipsch S4 | RAT 9 | Das KeyboardOh, I thought he was meaning like the i5 2500K can overclock past 4GHz... My bad.
Sure thing.
Thinking about coming a mod to simply not moderate.
EEEEEW!!! MSI, ASRock? How can THAT be recommended?
Have you even owned one? I own an ASRock P67 Extreme4 and its been very good to me. msi is also a very legit company.
Update:
*Finished RAM section with _jo3_'s recommendations
*Finished HDD section
*Finished and Added SSD section
*Finished Monitor section
*Finished optical drive section
Still need to add:
*prices
*glossary
*Other notes
Thinking about coming a mod to simply not moderate.
Not personally, but I have constant access to a computer with one of them. Biiiiiiig problems.