System Builder Marathon: High-Cost System

0 Bookmark starter: +Soldat 192 days ago | Source: www.tomshardware.com



Getting Ahead Of The Curve

Here's a list of the System Builder Marathon (SBM) articles in this five day series.


Day 1: The Low-Cost PC

Day 2: The Mid-Cost PC

Day 3: The High-Cost PC

Day 4: All Three SBM PCs Overclocked

Day 5: Summary - The Price/Performance Winner


The toughest part about building a system within a $4,000 hardware budget is that there are simply too many good parts to choose from. Many upper-range components typically offer similar performance, yet there isn't enough money to waste resources on frivolous things such as custom-painted cases and gold-plated heat sinks. Our selections have to stand up in light of this marathon's Day 5 value comparison, and this also has to be a system that anyone proficient with a screwdriver can replicate.

Getting Ahead Of The Curve




From the outside, our high-end build certainly looks like a performance player, but looks can be deceiving. In order to determine its true worth, we're going to treat it just as critically as we would any pre-built system with similar specifications. We'll also detail the rationale behind each selected component, which should reduce the amount of hate mail we get that always begins with "Why didn't you choose (a different part)" and ends with an insult to our collective intelligence.


Our build sheet certainly looks much like those of certain boutique builders, but notice that the final cost is in line with a "next model down" pre-built. (Compare Prices on Core 2 Extreme QX9650)



March 2008 SBM High-End PC Component Cost



CPU

Intel Core 2 Extreme QX9650

$1060



CPU Cooler

Swiftech H20-120 Compact Cooler Kit

Swiftech MCR220 2x120mm Radiator

Silverstone RADSUPPORT09

Swiftech Chrome 3/8-Inch Fittings, 2-pack

Swiftech Plastic Hose Clamps, 4-pack

2x Swiftech 3/8-Inch Neoprene Tubing Packs

2x Scythe S-Flex SFF21E 120mm Fan

140

36

15

5

6

26

30



Motherboard

Asus Striker II Formula

320



RAM

Crucial Ballistix DDR2 800 PC2-6400 - 4 GB

100



Graphics

2x Gigabyte GeForce 8800GTX - GV-NX88X768H-RH

840



Hard Drive

2x Western Digital Caviar WD7500AAKS

300



Sound

Asus SupremeFX II Riser Card

0



Case

Silverstone Temjin TJ09BW

270



Power

Coolermaster RS850-EMBA 850W

200



DVD-RW

Toshiba Samsung Storage Technology SH-203B

28



Auxiliary Fan

Antec SpotCool Motherboard Cooling Fan

15



Floppy Drive

NEC 1.44 MB Floppy Drive

9



Total Price


$3,400



Nobody said we had to spend all of the money, and we simply couldn't think of any performance additions that wouldn't have killed this system's value. If we didn't already have our own software and peripherals we could even spend the remaining money on a 24" monitor, keyboard, mouse, and operating system. A great deal of this build's budget is dedicated to the cooling system, but we're looking forward to the payoff from that in our Day 4 overclocking comparison.

Because this build's cooling system is so elaborate, a detailed component installation guide accompanies today's component descriptions and benchmarks. Let's take a closer look.

Join our discussion on this article!








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