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David Heizer
Guest
So I borked my 8-year-old custom-build with a spill, and need to replace it. And money is tight right now.
What I am looking to do, to the extent possible, is design an inexpensive build now that will do the job, and that has optimal upgradeability over the next year or two. So I need to identify which components can go from 0-60 reliably (e.g., RAM), and which ones I'm likely to have a much harder time upgrading (and so should buy max. value now); e.g., motherboard/case? I don't really have a set budget - technically, it's $0, but I need to replace my previous machine, so my budget is whatever it takes to do that.
What I had: all I know now is that it was an AMD 8-core (AMD 900 chipset), and I vaguely remember perhaps 2.5GHz? It had an Nvidia Ge-Force GPU, and I had recently maxed the RAM to 32GB. (Ironically, the RAM survived the spill unscathed, but I understand DDR3s are obsolete for a new build.)
What happened: The spill hit my keyboard (ironically, $10 keyboard working fine now after a wash), drizzled off the back of the keyboard shelf, through the top of the case at my feet, and down the vertical motherboard *right* where the CPU plugs in. Also managed to fritz the GPU below.
What survived: 256GB SSD hard drive with Windows 7 (I'm advised it won't run on modern machines - true?) - all my SATA HDD file storage. SATA CD/DVD drive. (All of this off at one end, well away from the spill.) The RAM I won't be able to use. All my fans. *I think* the power supply. (The tech at Fry's didn't trust it, but I think more on principle than evidence - does it make sense to see if it works for an hour without catching fire? The fans and the CD drive work fine, so the power supply is supplying power without any immediately obvious problem.) Monitors, keyboard, mouse.
My starting point: Beginning with the $500 Motion Design PC build...
...but with an upgrade to the CPU from the $700 build and dropping the SSD:
Upgraded CPU: CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 1600AF 3.2GHz 6-Core Processor ($149.99)
Upgraded CPU Cooler: AMD Wraith Stealth Cooler (Included with CPU) (-)
Motherboard: MSI B450 Tomahawk MAX ATX AM4 ($114.99) (same for $700 build)
GPU: AMD Radeon RX 560 4GB XFX ($129.99)
Memory: 16GB (2 x 8GB) HyperX Fury DDR4-3200 C16 ($60.97)
Storage: Already have.
Power Supply: Corsair CX Series CX450M 450W ATX 2.4 Power Supply ($69.99) (same for $700 build; may not need - see above)
Case: Fractal Design Focus G Mid Tower Case ($45.99)
Total: $571.92 ($501.93?)
So I guess my starting question at this point would be, is there an upgrade path from this to, say, a $1,500 build? Or higher?
And, if so, what components can readily be upgraded and which should I spend more on now?
Is it practical to upgrade the CPU later on? And, if so, will the motherboard need to be upgraded as well? (If the latter, I think this will require a new case, as it is bigger.)
CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 3800X 3.9GHz 8-Core Processor ($339.99)
CPU Cooler: (Included with CPU) (-)
Motherboard: ASUS TUF Gaming X570-Plus ATX AM4 ($179.99)
Case: Phanteks Enthoo Pro ATX Full Tower Case ($98.99)
I assume upgrading the GPU is *probably* not going to be a problem?
GPU: Nvidia GTX 1660TI 6GB - Gigabyte Windforce ($399.99)
I don't think I need to ask about RAM (although I note the cheaper motherboard maxes out at 64GB).
I also like the upgraded 1TB SSD and 1TB NVME SSD, and I'm not sure whether the cheaper motherboard supports the latter.
It's starting to sound like I might be making the case for going large on the CPU/[motherboard,case]. But I'm past my zone of perceived competence at this point.
Sorry for the novel; I appreciate any comments on what I've come up with so far.
What I am looking to do, to the extent possible, is design an inexpensive build now that will do the job, and that has optimal upgradeability over the next year or two. So I need to identify which components can go from 0-60 reliably (e.g., RAM), and which ones I'm likely to have a much harder time upgrading (and so should buy max. value now); e.g., motherboard/case? I don't really have a set budget - technically, it's $0, but I need to replace my previous machine, so my budget is whatever it takes to do that.
What I had: all I know now is that it was an AMD 8-core (AMD 900 chipset), and I vaguely remember perhaps 2.5GHz? It had an Nvidia Ge-Force GPU, and I had recently maxed the RAM to 32GB. (Ironically, the RAM survived the spill unscathed, but I understand DDR3s are obsolete for a new build.)
What happened: The spill hit my keyboard (ironically, $10 keyboard working fine now after a wash), drizzled off the back of the keyboard shelf, through the top of the case at my feet, and down the vertical motherboard *right* where the CPU plugs in. Also managed to fritz the GPU below.
What survived: 256GB SSD hard drive with Windows 7 (I'm advised it won't run on modern machines - true?) - all my SATA HDD file storage. SATA CD/DVD drive. (All of this off at one end, well away from the spill.) The RAM I won't be able to use. All my fans. *I think* the power supply. (The tech at Fry's didn't trust it, but I think more on principle than evidence - does it make sense to see if it works for an hour without catching fire? The fans and the CD drive work fine, so the power supply is supplying power without any immediately obvious problem.) Monitors, keyboard, mouse.
My starting point: Beginning with the $500 Motion Design PC build...
CGDirector PC & Workstation Builder - CG Director
The CGDirector PC-Builder lets you quickly find the best Computer Parts for your PC & Workstation Build. Use cases include 3D-Modeling, Animation, Video-Editing, Motion Design and more.
www.cgdirector.com
...but with an upgrade to the CPU from the $700 build and dropping the SSD:
Upgraded CPU: CPU: AMD Ryzen 5 1600AF 3.2GHz 6-Core Processor ($149.99)
Upgraded CPU Cooler: AMD Wraith Stealth Cooler (Included with CPU) (-)
Motherboard: MSI B450 Tomahawk MAX ATX AM4 ($114.99) (same for $700 build)
GPU: AMD Radeon RX 560 4GB XFX ($129.99)
Memory: 16GB (2 x 8GB) HyperX Fury DDR4-3200 C16 ($60.97)
Storage: Already have.
Power Supply: Corsair CX Series CX450M 450W ATX 2.4 Power Supply ($69.99) (same for $700 build; may not need - see above)
Case: Fractal Design Focus G Mid Tower Case ($45.99)
Total: $571.92 ($501.93?)
So I guess my starting question at this point would be, is there an upgrade path from this to, say, a $1,500 build? Or higher?
CGDirector PC & Workstation Builder - CG Director
The CGDirector PC-Builder lets you quickly find the best Computer Parts for your PC & Workstation Build. Use cases include 3D-Modeling, Animation, Video-Editing, Motion Design and more.
www.cgdirector.com
And, if so, what components can readily be upgraded and which should I spend more on now?
Is it practical to upgrade the CPU later on? And, if so, will the motherboard need to be upgraded as well? (If the latter, I think this will require a new case, as it is bigger.)
CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 3800X 3.9GHz 8-Core Processor ($339.99)
CPU Cooler: (Included with CPU) (-)
Motherboard: ASUS TUF Gaming X570-Plus ATX AM4 ($179.99)
Case: Phanteks Enthoo Pro ATX Full Tower Case ($98.99)
I assume upgrading the GPU is *probably* not going to be a problem?
GPU: Nvidia GTX 1660TI 6GB - Gigabyte Windforce ($399.99)
I don't think I need to ask about RAM (although I note the cheaper motherboard maxes out at 64GB).
I also like the upgraded 1TB SSD and 1TB NVME SSD, and I'm not sure whether the cheaper motherboard supports the latter.
It's starting to sound like I might be making the case for going large on the CPU/[motherboard,case]. But I'm past my zone of perceived competence at this point.
Sorry for the novel; I appreciate any comments on what I've come up with so far.