New PC!
Posted on Thu 27 October 2011 in blog
I finally built a new computer. My previous one was a Pentium D machine I built
my sophomore year of college, in 2007. I had seen evidence of bad capacitors
over a year ago, but hadn't had any problems until recently. Since June, my
system's stability had been getting worse as time went on. More and more
frequent blue screens were happening, and I was getting quite tired of it. I
knew that MACHINE_CHECK_EXCEPTION
was not a good sign, and almost certainly
pointed to a hardware issue.
So I did it. Tired of my crappy VIA chipset, I made sure to go with an Intel system this time (not that there are really any other options these days, if you have an Intel CPU).
Motherboard | Asus P8P67 LE (Part of this Bundle) |
CPU | Intel Core i5-2500K |
RAM | 8 GB (2 x 4GB) Corsair DDR3 1600MHz |
GPU | XFX Radeon HD 5570 - 1GB DDR3 |
PSU | Thermaltake TRX-650M 650-Watt Modular |
Case | Cooler Master Elite 310 |
You'll notice there are no hard drives on that list. I (somewhat recently) put two 1TB Hatachi HDs in RAID 1 so I decided to move those drives to the new box as well.
Overall, I am quite happy with the build. The case obviously isn't worth a million bucks, but it is sturdy and does the job. The power supply is very nice for the price; I love the modular cords (I hate a messy case!) and it runs quiet and cool. The one thing I'm not particularly thrilled about is that there are no mounting holes on the right side of the motherboard, so you have about 3" of overhanging PCB, right on the edge where the big connections (24 pin ATX!) are made.
This ASUS board has plenty of bells and whistles that you can read all about. Fancy graphical EFI BIOS, and EPU/TPU chips which are supposed to dynamically auto-tune the system for performance/energy. I have TPU switched off right now, and will play with overclocking a little bit later (especially since my RAM is 1600MHz and the board defaults to 1333.)
After getting the system built, I got to thinking about SSDs. A quick look at the numbers was enough to sell me right away. Modern SSDs are pushing over 400MB/s and some claim read speeds of up to 500MB/s. At 3.9Gbps, I'm glad my board has several 6Gbps SATA ports!
So I went with the 128GB Crucial m4. It showed up today and I could not wait to get windows installed on it. Let me just say WOW. If you are for one second considering making the switch to an SSD, go for it. I have yet to run any benchmarks on it vs my RAID array, but it is blazing fast. Windows boots up noticeably much quicker, and everything is just very snappy. (And yes this is compared to a HDD install on this board/CPU I did before the SSD arrived).