Page 1 of Home-build PC advice...
PCs & Mobiles Forum
Hi all - can you help?
I`m going to build a PC...
VERY low budget...but so far I have chosen the following...
2 x 512Mb PC3200 (DDR400) 184-pin RAM from Crucial = £118
Maxtor 160GB SATA 7200rpm 8MB cache Hard Drive = £60
x16 dual-layer DVD writer, all formats = £45
AMD Athlon 64 3000+ socket 939 512Kb including fan = £98
Total so far = £321
I need a motherboard to fit the above processor with 4 or 6 USB 2.0 ports, a case & a power supply....can you recommend/tell me the ones I need to fit the above stuff.
I think that`s everything - I can`t afford a graphics card yet but will get a 128Mb card at some point - the only graphics stuff I`ll be doing is digital photos (Adobe Elements/Photoshop and the Nikon software).
I can`t go over £400 total so have £80 for a motherboard & case - is that reasonable?
Have I forgotten anything? I already have XP Professional & Office XP and will get a cheap TFT monitor when it`s built.
Many thanks in advance
julianf
That MS will flag up the same OEM license number & the wide disparity in PC specification, when it goes to register. ;)
I enjoy being wrong and clueless on other subjects - My wife usually alerts me to which ones, as there seem to be an awful lot around the house.
This item was edited on Saturday, 15th January 2005, 11:00
RE: Home-build PC advice...
JB
mobo here, but looks like you will break the £80 limit if you still require
a case.
Ste.
...hey, who nicked me hat and JD??
RE: Home-build PC advice...
What are you looking for it to do for you? Unless you want to keep up with playing the latest games you could set your sights a bit lower.
Starting off with 512 stick of Ram will set you back £42 - freeing up 70 odd quid, you could then add more in when you`re feeling a bit flush.
This could cover you for an Abit Radeon R9200SE Graphics Card AGP 8x, 128mb, DVi which is in the £34 range (or you could spend more)
ASUS K8N-E Deluxe, 8xUSB2, Firewire, Serial ATA, Raid, blah,blah, blah. = £74
Nice case at around £30.
7 in 1 Card Reader built in about £15 or less.
Job done and enough left over for a brew.
Depends on what you want to do with it - anything you build will be out-dated within a few weeks anyway.
Used PCIndex to get these prices.
If it ain`t broke hit it harder
Damn Nicotine
This item was edited on Thursday, 20th January 2005, 23:22
RE: Home-build PC advice...
Novatech Athlon Pentium4 MidiATX Tower Case 300W PSU 3x5.25", 2x3.5" (1 Int.) In Black £19.98 inc .vat
Rated:
I can honestly say that this is the easiest case to build with that I have even seen. All the building can be done with the MOBO tray lying flat on your work surface, and then you just tilt it up and it slots in - brilliant! Excellent price too!
(not my review by the way)
If it ain`t broke hit it harder
Damn Nicotine
RE: Home-build PC advice...
Or at Savastore:
Radeon 9250 SE 128MB DDR DVI TV Retail £30.54inc. Itemcode: 10279300
£4 more saved.
;)
If it ain`t broke hit it harder
Damn Nicotine
Try Novatech for their mobo bundles too. I`ve had a couple and are excellent. Come with all documentation/CD`s etc..
Ste
We will pay the price but we will not count the cost..
Thanks guys - exactly the kind of responses I was hoping for...
I`m not going to be playing any games on it at all - got my XBox for that!
It`s going to be a standard home PC used for email, the internet and mostly for storing and manipulating 5MP digital photos. Possibly a bit of DVD creation/burning too.
julianf
All - given that my component list adds up to £400 or just over without a monitor, and given how closely this spec resembles my own wishlist, does anyone think that I`d do as well to go for this in the current Dell sale?
Dimension desktop 5000:
Intel P4 Processor 530 with HT technology (3GHz, 800MHz fsb, 1MB cache)
Microsoft Windows XP Home Edition SP2 & MS Works
FREE Dell 720 Inkjet Printer
512MB Dual Channel DDR2 400Mhz (2x256)
160GB (7200rpm) Serial ATA Hard Drive with 8MB cache
128MB PCI-Express ATI Radeon X300SE™ with TVout & DVI
15" Value Flat Panel Monitor (I`m used to a laptop so the display size is fine)
16x max. DVD+/-RW with double layer write capability
Keyboard/Mouse/Speakers
£541 inc VAT & Delivery.
thanks
julianf
RE: Home-build PC advice...
Hello
It started out with:
Quote:
I`m going to build a PC...VERY low budget...I can`t go over £400 total.
I already have XP Professional & Office XP and will get a cheap TFT monitor when it`s built.
Its now moved to £541 - for a tight budget that`s quite an increase.
The dell option is by no means a bad offering, it uses up £180 more than the components suggested. You miss out on the fun and experience of building your own. (TFT monitors are now coming in around the £160 mark)
In exchange you have a warranty to fall back on. I gave up on customer service depts, enhanced cost telephone support numbers many moons ago and have been doing my own ever since. If a part fails I can get it replaced and running within hours if so needed.
But don`t let me influence you :D
As ever, its your money, your choice.
Shaun
If it ain`t broke hit it harder
Damn Nicotine