Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

New computer building help

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • New computer building help

    So it's been quite a few years since I built a PC...

    I need a compatability check on all these parts... making sure I haven't missed some voltage issue, some power requirement or ability to be powered issue... things like that...

    Motherboard - GA EX58-UD5
    <?xml:namespace prefix = o ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" /><o:p></o:p>
    <?xml:namespace prefix = st1 ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:smarttags" /><st1:stockticker w:st="on">RAM</st1:stockticker> - CORSAIR TR3X6G1333C9 6GB (3x XMS3 2GB) PC-10600 (1333MHz) XMS DDR3 For X58 MB i7 Core, 3x240-pin DIMMs, Triple Kit, 9-9-9-24, 1.50V [TR3X6G1333C9]
    <o:p></o:p>

    <o:p></o:p>

    <o:p></o:p>

    <o:p></o:p>


    <st1:stockticker w:st="on">PSU</st1:stockticker>"Cooler Master Extreme Power+ POWER PLUS RS-650 RS650 650Watt ATX Silent PSU Power Supply
    <o:p></o:p>
    Disk Drive - Generic <st1:stockticker w:st="on">DVD</st1:stockticker>-RW

  • #2
    Re: New computer building help

    I really like my Seagate 500GBs, and I have 3 of them. However, these are the HDDs that became controversial in early 2009, when issues showed up with them bricking out. From what I read, after a certain number of uses, the drives would NOT actually lose data, but the data on the drives would be inaccessible.

    Then Seagate reluctantly put out a firmware update to correct the issue. But the first firmware update did even worse damage! There was a period of time when people were writing a lot of "I hate these HDDs" about this. Seagate defended itself by saying that really just a small percentage of these drives had the problem. But that didn't make many people happy.

    The revised firmware must have done the trick, because all seems quiet now. I never had any problems, and I flashed all 3 of my HDDs with (luckily) the revised version. It is available from the Seagate site. You might note that the firmware will flash all the appropriate drives at the same time, which may or may not be what you want. Disconnect other drives or not according to your own preference.

    (Yes, I would cheerfully buy these HDDs again.)

    Tom's Hardware reference from January 2009: Seagate's Update Bricking Working HDDs - Tom's HardwareSeagate Knowledge Base
    AMD Athlon 64 x2 5600+
    Gigabyte AM2+ GA-MA78GM-S2H ver 1.1. BIOS (newest) F11
    NB: AMD780G. SB: AMD SB700
    RAM 8GB (2 kits @ 4GB each) G.Skill DDR2-1000 (F2-8000CL5D-4GBPQ PC2-8000 x2 CL5-5-5-15) running as DDR2-800
    Case Antec P150
    PSU Corsair HX520W. (PSU calc by Corsair + NCIX; tested by TT Dr Power.)
    Cooling Xigmatek HDT-S1283 heatsink (Arctic Silver 5); 6 fans
    HDDs usable 1.7 TB Video ATI Radeon HD4670
    Monitor 22" LG W2242TQ w/Belkin DVI-D
    Sound Altec Lansing 5.1
    Mouses (2) Logi MX620 + Logi V220
    KB Simple Perfection backlit USB
    XP64
    No gaming; heavy simultaneous use of big programs
    System built Nov 2008



    Comment


    • #3
      Re: New computer building help

      Originally posted by Teclis View Post
      So it's been quite a few years since I built a PC...

      I need a compatability check on all these parts

      Motherboard - GA EX58-UD5
      <o:p></o:p>
      <st1:stockticker w:st="on">RAM</st1:stockticker> - CORSAIR TR3X6G1333C9 6GB (3x XMS3 2GB) PC-10600 (1333MHz) XMS DDR3 For X58 MB i7 Core, 3x240-pin DIMMs, Triple Kit, 9-9-9-24, 1.50V [TR3X6G1333C9]
      <o:p></o:p>

      <o:p></o:p>

      <o:p></o:p>

      <o:p></o:p>


      <st1:stockticker w:st="on">PSU</st1:stockticker>"Cooler Master Extreme Power+ POWER PLUS RS-650 RS650 650Watt ATX Silent PSU Power Supply
      <o:p></o:p>
      Disk Drive - Generic <st1:stockticker w:st="on">DVD</st1:stockticker>-RW
      My 2 cents....the parts you list are all compatible, but would not be my first choices. Here is why...the PSU is rarely given enough importance in a build. Stable, highly regulated power is critical, plenty of headroom should you decide to add another 260 down the road for SLI, and headroom for wear is also very important. I think a better choice for PSU would be this -- CompUSA.com | CMPSU-850TX | Corsair TX850W Power Supply --

      As for your video card, the 260 is a good choice but I believe the eVGA is a better choice than the Palit, if only for customer service and reputation alone. Look at the price of this one -- CompUSA.com | 896-P3-1255-AR | EVGA GeForce GTX 260 Core 216 Video Card --

      I think your DDR3 is a very good choice and the MB you've chosen is fine, though my personal choice was the Asus P6T Deluxe....good luck with what ever you decide.
      CM Storm Trooper - Corsair AX1200
      Asus Rampage IV Extreme - i7 3930k - Corsair H100 cooling
      16GB Corsair Vengeance Memory - 2xGTX 580 SLI + GTX 460 PhysX - 3x500GB HDD + 240GB Mushkin + 2x256GB Crucial SSD
      Sony & Asus Optical Drives - Logitech C310, G15, G13, G700

      Comment

      Working...
      X