Looking for advice : My dad & bro's new build

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  1. Posts : 2,606
    Windows 7 Pro X64 SP1
       #11

    Somehow the idea of "no overclocking" with a Sandy Bridge CPU just seems wrong.

    I recommend spending the modest extra sum for the "k" suffix CPU. Overclocking it by raising the CPU multiplier is painless. Going above 4GHz without effort is routine. (The Asus board may go to 4.2GHz more or less automatically. That's true of the P8P67 Pro; I'm not sure of the other models in the series.)
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  2. Posts : 1,326
    Windows 10 Professional 64-bit
    Thread Starter
       #12

    bobkn said:
    Somehow the idea of "no overclocking" with a Sandy Bridge CPU just seems wrong.

    I recommend spending the modest extra sum for the "k" suffix CPU. Overclocking it by raising the CPU multiplier is painless. Going above 4GHz without effort is routine. (The Asus board may go to 4.2GHz more or less automatically. That's true of the P8P67 Pro; I'm not sure of the other models in the series.)
    No, we won't be overclocking, no matter what. That is all.
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  3. Posts : 1,403
    Win 7 Ultimate 32bit
       #13

    Even though you say that money is not an issue.

    As I am sure this will be a pure gaming system....... unless there will be PhotoShop, or Video Rendering or Audio Production, or Virtual Machines, that 8G's will be wasted. You will have more fun taking that money you spend on that ram and lighting a Cigar with it, or wiping your bum after a dump. No joke. Results would be the same.

    I would stick with 4G's of ram in 2 x 2G sticks

    Spend the rest on a top of the line video card.
    You will all be happier you did.
    Case later on, if there are any games that will take advantage of the higher end graphics, you won't be having to worry about it.

    You can also go with a 750W PSU and be just fine.
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  4. Posts : 1,326
    Windows 10 Professional 64-bit
    Thread Starter
       #14

    Tepid, the build will be like... for Battlefield 3 (almost) alone. They want to run the game at high/max settings. I heard many thing about it (but I think this is exaggerated, though). Some say that a Core i7 930 won't be able to hold up to the game. Some say that the game will need MORE than 4GB of RAM. I saw that the recommanded amount of RAM for that game alone is 4GB. So, I'll stay with 8GB.

    Like I said, I barely convinced them on the Core i5 2500. So, I don't want to go and say "hey, you only need 4GB of RAM" or "750W PSU is enough". They'll shout at me and I don't wanna deceive them.
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  5. Posts : 26,869
    Windows 11 Pro
       #15

    Take a look at this board. Read the feedback. I think you will get more for the same money. I have one and it is rock solid. ASRock P67 EXTREME4 (B3)

    Also take a look at this ram. Works great, not to mention the 7.9 WEI. . G Skill Ripjaws X DDR3-1866

    Also, I agree you cannot have too big a PSU, With that setup you can do well with a 750W with some room for expansion. Look at the HX750
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  6. Posts : 1,326
    Windows 10 Professional 64-bit
    Thread Starter
       #16

    Now, I'm kinda lost. so many suggestion... what keep what to leave... the PSU... you guys are right. I used the eXtreme PSU calculator and even with 50% capacitor aging... there's no way it will reach 850W... For the rest... for the motherboard, I'm tempted to go with Asus because we always went Asus... I'm lost :\ And the RAM, I'm kinda lost too because I never hit the problem of not enough space to put the fan... but looking at it now in my own case... it's true that putting an extra 6GB will be kinda hard...
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  7. Posts : 26,869
    Windows 11 Pro
       #17

    Just slow down and think of what you are going to be using the computer for and what you may want to use it for in the future. Then look for a board and chip that will accomidate those things. For example: I looked at the board you picked out. It has 2 PCIe X16 slots. But, the 2nd X16 runs at X4 and slot shares bandwith with both PCIe X1 slots and the USB3. So you loose a lot by using the X4 slot and also you will not be able to run 2 Graphics cards.

    If you are not going to OC, why pay extra for a P67 board and a K serise chip? The only real advantage to that setup is to OC as far as I know. I had a bad experience with MSI so Didn't look at their boards. I looked at all the others by the features I wanted. Then I read all of the reviews on each one. Narrow it down to 3 or 4 and then read the reviews again and look at the layout and think about how it will actually work in the case. For what I was looking for, I liked the Asus Sabertooth, Asus P8P67 deluxe, Asrock extreme4 and extreme6. I made my choice from those.

    Lookat the PSU calculators and put in what you are going to have now. Then add more for aging and more still to allow for future expansion. Choose the ram with lower heat spreaders. Although the look cool, they won't fit under many CPU coolers. I chose G Skill X serise for 2 reasons. They have the best teck support in the business and the heat spreaders are not real big. Every review I read on the X serise was very good-no matter which board they were used on.

    Once you decide on those parts, the rest is fairly easy. To me, those are the items you should never skimp on.

    These are just my opinions, YMMV.
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  8. Posts : 12,012
    Windows 7 Home Premium SP1, 64-bit
       #18

    Essenbe is right. I should have caught that. If you are NOT overclocking, there is little reason to get a P series motherboard. Get an H series.

    With the P series, you could NOT run without a video card should your video card ever fail. With an H, you can use on-processor graphics if you have to and that works great for normal use and mild gaming.

    The H will save you a few bucks which you could use toward improving the video card.

    I'm using a 2500 on a Gigabye H67A-UD3H-B3 with no problems at all. I use on-processor graphics, but could use a separate card if I needed to.

    There is just no need for a P board in a non-overclocked situation (non-K processor).

    If you aren't overclocking, there is no reason to buy a board full of overclocking features, but I would get one with the right features that you might use (eSATA? firewire? PCI slots? etc). I'd go with Asus or Gigabyte, but you can obviously have a bad experience with any brand.

    The RAM thing isn't a big deal. Get 1.5 volt for sure. If the price is about the same, I would get 2 sticks of 4 gigs rather than 4 sticks of 2 gigs so I did not have to worry about the heat sink overhang. Get sticks with no or small heat spreaders. Tall heat spreaders MIGHT make the RAM absolutely uninstallable on the inside slots due to clearance, so be careful here.

    I know nothing about gaming cards so can't help you there.

    Everything I have read about PSU capacitor aging says it is over-rated. It occurs, but the effect is not a major effect. Look at my system specs for info on actual power usage (measured by a Killawatt) for a system similar to what you are building. I do NOT use a video card, so add in for that.

    The rest of it (case, DVD, etc) is personal preference.
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  9. Posts : 2,164
    Windows 7 Ultimate 64bit
       #19

    just for reference, my system uses 275watts at idle and 375 at full load while gaming.
    I currently prefer Corsair memory since I had to RMA some older ram and they were quick and they upgraded my ram. RMA'd 2x1GB DDR2 800 and they offered me 2x2GB DDR2 800, which I accepted.
    the XMS3 ram I am using has short heat spreaders.
    Newegg.com - CORSAIR XMS3 8GB (2 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1333 Desktop Memory Model CMX8GX3M2A1333C9
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  10. Posts : 1,326
    Windows 10 Professional 64-bit
    Thread Starter
       #20

    @Zepher : That RAM looks pretty good. I like Corsair... In fact, that's what I have here. Probably getting that... As long as they have 8 GB.

    @ignatzatsonic & essenbe : thanks for the heads up! I'll chat again with him to see if he wants SLI down the road or not. That Gigabyte... I've looked at it before and that's what interressed me the most because of the on-board video ouputs. I didn't know that those has a different chipset. Thanks to both!
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