2 PC build options - opinions please :)

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  • TiffanyKate
    PCHF Member
    • May 2018
    • 6

    #1

    2 PC build options - opinions please :)

    Hey people. Could anyone please help me decide which of these builds to go with? I’m thinking the $1000 one, but just wanted to check. I know the case and cooling hasn’t been listed in the $1100 one, it won’t have the liquid cooling, and the company is sourcing a case similar to the $1000 quoted case.

    $1000 PC

    Intel core i5 4460 Quad Core (3.20ghz turbo to 3.40ghz)

    Corsair AIO liquid cooling system

    MSI B85M-E45 Gaming motherboard

    2TB HDD
    120GB SSD

    8GB DDR3 Kingston Hyper X Gaming memory

    MSI NVIDIA GeForce GTX 980 4gb

    Windows 10 home

    Case: BitFenix Gaming case with led fans included.

    60 day hardware warranty. Built by an IT tech who has done other friends PCs and is great - not dodgy at all and would fix any issues.


    $1100

    AMD A10-6800K 4.10GHz

    16GB DDR3

    ASRock FM2A88X+ killer

    2GB Nvidia GeForce GTX 960

    120GB SSD

    1TB HDD

    Windows 10 Pro

    Built by a computer trading shop, with 1 year warranty.
  • veeg
    PCHF Director
    • Jul 2016
    • 8976

    #2
    Hello

    I am assuming you are wanting build for gaming. Also i am assuming you have a good gaming monitor. What isn’t mentioned tho is the type of psu.

    Also i would pick the #1 build..

    @Evan Omo

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    • DOUGIE
      PCHF Member
      • Jun 2017
      • 424

      #3
      I would go with the First option, regardless.
      The $1000 build.
      Go intel. Has a 30% faster processor than the AMD rig, and that equates to much faster processing power..
      Intel CPU benchmark - 6702
      AMD CPU benchmark - 4871

      Comment

      • TiffanyKate
        PCHF Member
        • May 2018
        • 6

        #4
        Originally posted by vger
        Hello

        I am assuming you are wanting build for gaming. Also i am assuming you have a good gaming monitor. What isn’t mentioned tho is the type of psu.

        Also i would pick the #1 build..

        @Evan Omo
        Thanks for your reply. Sorry I didn’t upload originally, I was waiting for the computer shop to advise me.

        1 - $1000 is
        RaidMax RX-850AE 80+ GOLD Certified Modular Power Supply.

        2 - $1100 is - PSU is a non-modular 400W

        I’m using mainly for photoshop, illustrator, WoW, COD, Overwatch and fortnite. My old Alienware laptop ran these all fine with lesser specs, so this should do the trick. Now knowing the psu of each build I’m definitely thinking build 1. The promise of a 12 month warranty with build 2 was part of what formed my doubt.

        Comment

        • TiffanyKate
          PCHF Member
          • May 2018
          • 6

          #5
          Originally posted by DOUGIE
          I would go with the First option, regardless.
          The $1000 build.
          Go intel. Has a 30% faster processor than the AMD rig, and that equates to much faster processing power..
          Intel CPU benchmark - 6702
          AMD CPU benchmark - 4871
          Thanks so much for your reply. Great advice, thank you

          Comment

          • phillpower2
            PCHF Administrator
            • Sep 2016
            • 15209

            #6
            Sorry but have to be blunt and would not go near either of the two, dated and limited spec hardware, a Raidmax PSU in a build costing $1000 and a no name brand PSU in a build costing $1100

            Two things worthy of particular mention. (1) Liquid cooling is only something that you should worry about using if extreme overclocking, it requires additional maintenance, can leak and take out all of your hardware and the pumps can get noisy. (2) Purchasing your own parts then having them assembled for you gives you the benefit of each individual component having their own separate warranty, example, I have put a list of parts together for you at the link here the PSU chosen has a 10 year warranty which is a sign of the quality and the cover of what you should be looking for before parting with your cash.

            Comment

            • TiffanyKate
              PCHF Member
              • May 2018
              • 6

              #7
              Originally posted by phillpower2
              Sorry but have to be blunt and would not go near either of the two, dated and limited spec hardware, a Raidmax PSU in a build costing $1000 and a no name brand PSU in a build costing $1100

              Two things worthy of particular mention. (1) Liquid cooling is only something that you should worry about using if extreme overclocking, it requires additional maintenance, can leak and take out all of your hardware and the pumps can get noisy. (2) Purchasing your own parts then having them assembled for you gives you the benefit of each individual component having their own separate warranty, example, I have put a list of parts together for you at the link here the PSU chosen has a 10 year warranty which is a sign of the quality and the cover of what you should be looking for before parting with your cash.
              So sorry for my late reply. Thank you very much for taking the time to write such a detailed reply, and also for doing the build for me, I really appreciate it. That build looks great, and so much better than the options I posted. Unfortunately in AUD it comes to about $1400-$1600 without the other bits and pieces needed. I tried fiddling around on the Aussie parts site but couldn’t get it any lower than that. I suppose by happy coincidence neither of the two builds ended up working out, so thanks to your advice I now know I should be raising my standards a bit when looking from now on. I have happened across an i7 4770 build for $1100. So glad the other two options fell through for me to be able to go with this one.

              Thanks again so much for your help!
              Tiff

              Comment

              • phillpower2
                PCHF Administrator
                • Sep 2016
                • 15209

                #8
                No problem, been a bit busy myself lately

                Sorry for the build that I put together being over budget, went off the info in your OP and only seeing the $ sign incorrectly assumed that it was US $.

                Another site for you to look at is Logical Increments here just change the location to Australia and it will give you parts list suggestions for your budget, I reckon that for a decent gaming rig you are looking at between 1200 and 1250 Aussie $s.

                You are welcome btw

                [COLOR=rgb(44, 130, 201)]Edit to add: Thread closed as member has since started a new thread here which has been concluded.[/COLOR]

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