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If you could build a computer for Under $1000...

OrangeAngel

Legacy Supporter 2
Joined
May 30, 2011
Hello, I'm asking people, if they had $999.99 (yes, just under $1000), and you built a computer, what would the parts be? (includes Monitor and OS, Case). This is also the place for people to show a build, and get tips from the Herocraft community!

Format:
Name of the build: (I like to name my builds, though I've only built one, named it "POS")
Grand Total: (Includes Shipping/Sales)

Case:
Motherboard:
Processor:
Hard Drive (Or SSD):
Video Card:
Power Supply:
RAM:
Monitor:
CDROM/Burner:
Operating System:
Extras:

 

Kryptomaniac

Legacy Supporter 7
Joined
Oct 29, 2011
Location
Ontario, Canada
well god damn there are 100s of different builds. mainly reliant on obviously AMD or INTEL build. But good idea, ill post mine later tomorrow. :D
 

agentjwall

Godly
Joined
Aug 23, 2011
Location
[Classified]
I always wanted to build my own computer so I wouldn't have to game on my macbook...

*sigh* Maybe someday when I get a more 'disposable', disposable income...
 

xxMASSCHAOSx

Legacy Supporter 3
Joined
Aug 5, 2011
My build cost around 700$ took around 3 weeks of pay and planning by all worth it www.newegg.com that's where I got my build. Good luck! (I'll post my specs once I get home)
 

OrangeAngel

Legacy Supporter 2
Joined
May 30, 2011
I always wanted to build my own computer to I wouldn't have to game on my macbook...

*sigh* Maybe someday when I get a more 'disposable', disposable income...
It's not as bad as the people gaming on a kindle fire =P

LESS TALK. MORE BUILDS
 

OrangeAngel

Legacy Supporter 2
Joined
May 30, 2011
Shameful Double post, but here is my build!

Name of the build: Dialated Dingo
Grand Total: $801.35

Case: Rosewill BLACKHAWK Gaming ATX Mid Tower - $89.99
Motherboard: ASUS M5A97 AM3+ AMD 970 - $94.99
Processor: AMD Phenom II X4 965 Black Edition Deneb - $119.99
Hard Drive (Or SSD): Samsung by Seagate Spinpoint F3 HD502HJ/ST500DM005 - $79.99
Video Card: EVGA 01G-P3-1556-KR GeForce GTX 550 Ti (Fermi) - $134.99
Power Supply: SPARKLE R-SPI750ACAG - $104.99
RAM: G.SKILL Ripjaws Series 8GB (2 x 4GB) - $41.99
Monitor: Already have one - $0.00
CDROM/Burner: LG 22X Super-Multi DVD Burner - $16.99
Operating System: Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium SP1 64-bit - $99.99
Extras: Nope.

So... Tips on it? Should I get one thing over the other?
 

microsim

Legacy Supporter 7
Joined
May 1, 2011
If I had to build a PC for under 1k, I wouldn't skimp on the PSU. Cheap versions can fail hilariously and ruin components when they do. Seasonic, Corsair (except for the builder series) and XFX make quality PSU's. I have no idea if sparkle is quality or not so if it's reputable, take what I said with a grain of salt.

In the first case, don't go for RAM with massive fins (there's an identical finless version). Speaking from experience, it is a stupid thing to do, especially when you later want to put a larger heatsink in your case. You'll find that there won't be enough clearance for the heatsink and there will be much anger.

Despite the fins, its a decent selection. No need to go with anything higher than 1600Mhz or 'ZOMG timings' - it won't make a significant amount of difference to games or applications.

The 'If I only had $1000 and lived in the US where tech prices are cheaper' Build:
ASUS - P8Z68-V-LE
Sapphire - SA-7850-2GD5
Fractal Design - FD-CA-ARC-BL
Corsair - CMPSU-550TXM
Intel Core i5 2500K
Hitachi Deskstar 7K1000 500GB 7200RPM
Corsair Vengeance CML8GX3M2A1600C9 8GB (2x4GB) DDR3
Sony AD7280SGB DVDRW OEM
I already have keyboard/mouse/spare OS/monitor so that's excluded.
Not Ivy Bridge because I haven't been bothered to look at it yet.

Total is AU$1034, but with prices here being more expensive than the US, it's probably closer to US$1000. Shop around and you can probably find cheaper prices.

Hint: Cheaper license of Win 7 Pro can be bought if you're a student or at university (about $50) - even though it's classified as an upgrade, you can get it to activate even if you install from scratch. Just modify a field in regedit and the OS forgets that it's upgrade media(or at least this worked when I did it a year ago). It's not warez/filez/hax - to qualify you technically need a previous copy of windows (which you probably already have). This just bypasses the requirement to have the old copy of windows installed on the PC you want to install win 7 onto. It's much simpler to do a clean install from scratch.

Finally, no build is complete unless you have cut yourself when building it. I'm looking at you, I/O plates. ;)
 

Dazureus

Legacy Supporter 4
Joined
Jan 14, 2011
Location
Texas
Finally, no build is complete unless you have cut yourself when building it. I'm looking at you, I/O plates. ;)
It's an established fact that truly great PCs are not produced by any simple combination of pieces, but a subconscious communion with the builder's mind, initiated by a blood ritual. Benefits of advanced Technomancy include tweaks to mouse movement or number generation, higher-than-expected overclocks and improved overall efficiency, and kicking people off your WiFi while away from the system itself.

It's not recommended that a novice jump right into these particular arts, however, as side-effects of getting in over one's head can include unavoidable tiredness, headaches, fevers, phantom noises and images, and suddenly losing all control over a body part just as the warranty expires.
 
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