Baseline, performance, and ultra PC builds!
What time is it? It's time to build a PC with our Blueprints! This month, we've built three rigs at three approximate price points: Baseline, Performance, and Ultra. Baseline gets you a powerful that is suitable for gaming and content creation at 1080p, Performance beefs everything up across the board, and Ultra is the kind of rig you build when price is no object.These rigs are lab-tested and editor-approved. Feedback is, of course, welcome. Tell us what you think!
We're upgrading a few core items this month, but
the total cost didn't rise that much, because prices have gone down
elsewhere. The biggest change is the case, which used to be a Corsair
Carbide 200R but is now the Fractal Design Define R4.
Now that this sweet chassis costs just 80 bucks, it's hard to resist.
It has two excellent low-noise 140mm fans hooked to a fan controller,
pre-installed sound-absorbing panels, removable and even rotate-able
drive cages, and generally high
build quality for the money. We also upgraded the power supply from a
Corsair CX500M to a 650-watt Seasonic X-Series. The new PSU has premium
build quality, near-silent operation, and four PCIe connectors instead
of the Corsair's two. It ordinarily costs well over $100, so we couldn't
pass it up at $70.
For the first time in many months, we're not changing any hardware at this tier. We considered AMD’s new Radeon R9 290X
video card, but at press time it was still about a week away from
release, and we hadn't seen anything other than the reference design
floating around. We'd like to see some vendor-customized cooling with
enhanced thermal and acoustic performance before we can recommend one
over the EVGA GeForce GTX 780
with its "ACX" cooler, which has roughly the same gaming performance
and runs totally cool and quiet. We did see some price dips on the power
supply, motherboard, CPU, and SSD, which offset the steadily rising
cost of RAM. We selected a four-piece kit because Intel's X79
motherboard chipset works best in a "quad-channel" memory setup.
This month, we finally upgraded the Asus P9X79 Deluxe
motherboard with the new-and-improved X79 Deluxe. The new board has a
host of improvements, and fi rst up is that it has double the SATA 6Gb/s
ports, at eight total. Second, it has improved Audio from Realtek by
going from ALC898 to ALC1150, and Wi-Fi has also been boosted from
802.11n to 802.11ac. Possibly the most important reason, though, is that
the Bluetooth was upgraded from 3.0 to 4.0 (that was a joke). Also,
since this mobo only recognizes Intel's new Ivy Bridge-E CPUs
out-of-the-box, we upgraded from Sandy Bridge-E to Ivy Bridge-E, as well.
We also upgraded the storage subsystem this month,
so both our SSD and HDD got a refresh. First, we decided to give our
Ultra build a terabyte drive. We know the Samsung 840 Evo
is not as fast as the 840 Pro, but the Pro was not available in a 1TB
size when we went to press. It also seemed time to upgrade our HDD from a
3TB Seagate Barracuda to a 4GB unit, now that 4TB drives are actually
affordable.
No comments:
Post a Comment