Best computer for a value of £600 to £650

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  1. Posts : 435
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
    Thread Starter
       #61

    This is the same SSD I need but a different Part Number:

    http://www.crucial.com/uk/store/mpar...AFA2C5A5CA7304

    However this says it is for a different computer, will it still work, and how do I go about installing it, would I put it as a second hard drive next to the Original or can this PC only support one?
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 26,869
    Windows 11 Pro
       #62

    Try this at Amazon.com/UK but I don't think it has the 2.5" adapter, but they are very cheap.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 12,012
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
       #63

    Faceofjoe421 said:
    how do I go about installing it, would I put it as a second hard drive next to the Original or can this PC only support one?
    Nearly any desktop case has room for two or more drives. Most standard ATX cases can hold 3 or 4.

    An SSD has no moving parts, so many people just use tape or tiedowns to mount them rather than screws.
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 435
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
    Thread Starter
       #64

    ignatzatsonic said:
    Faceofjoe421 said:
    how do I go about installing it, would I put it as a second hard drive next to the Original or can this PC only support one?
    Nearly any desktop case has room for two or more drives. Most standard ATX cases can hold 3 or 4.

    An SSD has no moving parts, so many people just use tape or tiedowns to mount them rather than screws.
    XPS 8300 Hard Drives - how many total? - Desktop General Hardware Forum - Desktop - Dell Community

    Hmm, pretty sweet then :) - Does SATA allow SSD Drives?

    It says there are 4 SATA Hard Bays.

    Wouldn't prefer to do tape, rather it was secure.

    In total, the whole system will around £800-£900 then :)
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 435
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
    Thread Starter
       #65

    So my current plan is:

    - This computer with the i7 Core Processor:
    The Dell Online Store: Build Your System

    Then when I get more money

    When customising it says the ATI Radeon HD 6950 2GB DDR5 is £550, however after a quick Google it says £220ish, this sounds to good to be true, unless DELL are rip-offs.

    This is the £200 one: http://www.scan.co.uk/products/2gb-x...oogle+shopping

    Next I would get 2 lots of 2x4GB Ram from Crucial for £70
    8GB Kit (4GBx2), 240-pin DIMM, DDR3 PC3-10600 upgrades for Dell XPS 8300 Desktop/PC, CT1843101 from Crucial.com

    Then finally get a 64GB SSD for around £100
    64GB, 2.5-inch Solid State Drive, upgrades for Dell OptiPlex 380 Small Form Factor Desktop/PC, CT2222573 from Crucial.com

    The actual computer will cost £700, upgrading it will cost £400

    I would then Install Windows 7 Ultimate and this would be my perfect configuration.

    Will this work out, or not?

    Thanks for all your help

    Joe
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 12,012
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
       #66

    I can’t see the actual details of your PC when I click your first link. You will have to type or paste in the specifics, such as CPU, hard drives, RAM, monitor, operating system, etc.

    If you are buying an Intel 2000 series processor, that would use dual channel DDR3 RAM. I assume you are buying 4 GB, which will probably be delivered as 2 sticks of 2 GB each. Your motherboard should have 4 slots, but you will have to confirm that. The normal upgrade from 4 is to 8, rather than 12. Very unlikely you would make use of 12.

    An ATI Radeon 6950 is about $250 US in the US, so yes, Dell is a ripoff.

    That is a very powerful graphics gaming card. By the time you save enough money to buy it, there will probably be a better graphics card available for the same money. So don't make a graphics card upgrade decision UNTIL the money is actually available.

    If you bought that card, you would probably have to upgrade your power supply to run it. Some Dell PCs have oddball connections for the power supply. This is another reason to have a PC built locally using standard parts rather than oddball Dell parts. I don't know if that particular Dell uses anything oddball.

    I don't know if that Dell case is a full ATX size. It may be a skinny case of some kind and that may mean that a regular ATX power supply would not fit. More reason to use a local builder.

    That’s a good SSD. I assume you would get it later as an upgrade? If so, I would wait until I had the PC so I could confirm the hard drive mounting setup. It may be that you could use a 3.5 inch SSD rather than a 2.5 inch model.
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 1,846
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64, & Mac OS X 10.9.2
       #67

    i paid £220 for an xfx HD 6950 2gb about 6 weeks ago :) the going price.
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 11,408
    ME/XP/Vista/Win7
       #68

    You may to take look at one from novatech
    The iRush
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 435
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
    Thread Starter
       #69

    ignatzatsonic said:
    I can’t see the actual details of your PC when I click your first link. You will have to type or paste in the specifics, such as CPU, hard drives, RAM, monitor, operating system, etc.

    If you are buying an Intel 2000 series processor, that would use dual channel DDR3 RAM. I assume you are buying 4 GB, which will probably be delivered as 2 sticks of 2 GB each. Your motherboard should have 4 slots, but you will have to confirm that. The normal upgrade from 4 is to 8, rather than 12. Very unlikely you would make use of 12.

    An ATI Radeon 6950 is about $250 US in the US, so yes, Dell is a ripoff.

    That is a very powerful graphics gaming card. By the time you save enough money to buy it, there will probably be a better graphics card available for the same money. So don't make a graphics card upgrade decision UNTIL the money is actually available.

    If you bought that card, you would probably have to upgrade your power supply to run it. Some Dell PCs have oddball connections for the power supply. This is another reason to have a PC built locally using standard parts rather than oddball Dell parts. I don't know if that particular Dell uses anything oddball.

    I don't know if that Dell case is a full ATX size. It may be a skinny case of some kind and that may mean that a regular ATX power supply would not fit. More reason to use a local builder.

    That’s a good SSD. I assume you would get it later as an upgrade? If so, I would wait until I had the PC so I could confirm the hard drive mounting setup. It may be that you could use a 3.5 inch SSD rather than a 2.5 inch model.
    Base: Intel® Core™ i3-2120 Processor (3.30GHz, 3MB) - Intel Core i7-2600 Processor (3.40Ghz 8MB)
    Microsoft Operating System: English Genuine Windows® 7 Home Premium 64 Bit
    Operating System Recovery Options: OS Windows® Recovery Media Not included
    Enhanced Service Packs: 1Yr Collect & Returns Warranty – No upgrade selected
    Online Backup: DataSafe Online Backup 2GB - 1 year licence
    Microsoft Application Software: Microsoft® Office Starter: reduced-functionality Word & Excel w/ads.* No PowerPoint or Outlook
    Protect your new PC: McAfee® Security Center* 30-Days trial version
    Accidental Damage Support: No Accidental Damage Support
    Memory: 3072MB Dual Channel DDR3 1333MHz [3x1024] Memory
    Optical Devices: DVD +/- RW Drive (read/write CD & DVD) with Roxio and DVD Burn software
    Hard Drive: 500GB (7200RPM) SATA Hard Drive
    Video Card: Graphics : Integrated Intel® HD 2000
    Sound Cards: Sound : Integrated 7.1 with THX® TruStudio
    Monitor: Display Not Included
    Mouse: Dell Optical Scroll USB (2 buttons scroll) DUAL TONE Mouse
    Keyboard: Dell™ USB Entry Keyboard - UK/Irish (QWERTY)
    Dell System Media Kit: XPS 8300 Resource DVD
    Speakers: No Speakers (Speakers are required to hear audio from your system)
    Shipping Documents: English - Documentation with UK/Ire Power cord
    Standard Warranty: 1 year Collect & Return Hardware Support included with your PC
    Call Dell Experts: One free Dell Expert call to help with your PC queries within 60 days of purchase
    DataSafe: Datasafe Local 2.3 Basic

    Most of this is not needed, but why not :)

    I chose the GFX card because it was the only one I thought was compatible

    Crucial says the max RAM is 16GB, which I will try figuring out how.

    I'm getting the SSD after purchase yes.

    I have no idea how to upgrade my power supply or anything

    Edit; the RAM has 4 Slots and the Maximum is 16 GB so maybe 4 sets of 4GB Ram?
      My Computer


  10. Posts : 12,012
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
       #70

    Faceofjoe421 said:

    Base: Intel® Core™ i3-2120 Processor (3.30GHz, 3MB) - Intel Core i7-2600 Processor (3.40Ghz 8MB)

    Memory: 3072MB Dual Channel DDR3 1333MHz [3x1024] Memory

    Video Card: Graphics : Integrated Intel® HD 2000


    I have no idea how to upgrade my power supply or anything
    Which processor?? The 2120 or the 2600?

    The RAM looks odd to me. 3 Sticks on a dual channel board?

    The integrated graphics is fine. You would not have to buy a graphics card to start with. You can use that until you upgrade.

    I would be very careful about Dell because you will have to upgrade your power supply IF you upgrade to that Radeon video card. You don't know yet if a more powerful video card will fit in that Dell case. It may be a slimline case? And you don't know if a more powerful ATX power supply will fit and connect properly.

    I would seriously investigate another supplier--such as Novatech that TheOG mentioned. That way, you would know that you are getting industry standard parts, rather than possibly getting some non-standard Dell proprietary parts.

    If you were going to buy the Dell and not upgrade it, I'd say OK, but you aren't planning to stick with the original parts.
      My Computer


 
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