Page 1 of 1

case problem

PostPosted: Mon Aug 01, 2005 6:14 pm
by Capt. Farhan
ok i have decided to bought new pc with following configuration....

nforce 3 motherboard socket 939
AMD athlon 64 3000+
geforce 6600 256mb
1 gb ram
120 gb hdd
DVD-RW

now all is fine....but there is one problem about my case....the case is too much expensive which the salesman is recommending....with water cooler and power supply 450 watt.....i cant afford it...it is neccassery to buy this sort of case.....
          there is another case with one fan at the rear and two on the side where the vga card lies...and another exhaust fan linking with the processor....is it ok and suits with my specification....thanks

Re: case problem

PostPosted: Mon Aug 01, 2005 8:48 pm
by ctjoyce
Well what kind of case are you starting out with. It sounds like you need a full ATX case so im going to suggest the RaidMax Scorpio 668. Nice'n'Cheap, however good quality, and looks quite nice also.

Re: case problem

PostPosted: Mon Aug 01, 2005 11:51 pm
by congo
I run my brand new 64 bit 3500+ system in an old stripped out case frame.

Image

You can just hang all the hardware from a wall hook if you want, cases are a waste of money unless you have some kinda Vermin chewing at your cables.

Any el cheapo 500w PSU will do, or go to the dump and get an old PSU (atx 2.0) from there, it will work.

Tell the salesman to pick on someone else, or get a new salesman, it sounds like he's ripping you off so I bet you could get your stuff cheaper and get a fancy case for a better price anyway.

BTW....... You are getting an nForce3 chipset? Why? It's the wrong one! Probably another ploy by the salesman to clear old stock out of his shop, BEWARE!!!

Get the nForce4 SLI or Ultra chipset for goodness sakes man!

Re: case problem

PostPosted: Tue Aug 02, 2005 1:27 am
by Rockin Bassist Benji
WOW congo that was a very, critical view! And i cant agree with you more the GT versions are normaly better and have more power per buck  ;) , now i wonder what you would have said if i'd have asked before i bought my computer from PC World!? lol
Regards
Ben

Re: case problem

PostPosted: Tue Aug 02, 2005 10:05 am
by congo
Sorry, I couldn't advise sooner.

Re: case problem

PostPosted: Tue Aug 02, 2005 1:01 pm
by ctjoyce
I second everything Congo said. If your not too sure what are good parts, or what will work with what go to www.ibuypower.com When you customize a computer there you get a pretty good idea of whats good, and how much things cost. You also get warned if you have two things that are incompatable.

Hope this helps
~CTJoyce

PS. Go ATi X800 PRO *byass byass*

Re: case problem

PostPosted: Tue Aug 02, 2005 6:23 pm
by Capt. Farhan
ok thnakssssss i am changing nforce3 to nforce4
6600 to 6600 gt 128
and now i will also takecare of my salesman
thanks for u replies
and one more question with nforce4 motherboard it is important to have a PSU more than 450 watt.thanks

Re: case problem

PostPosted: Tue Aug 02, 2005 11:10 pm
by ctjoyce
Not really. 400 watt should do nicely, just as long as you dont plan to put a super overclock on any of your parts / put a bunch of fans and LED's into the case.

Re: case problem

PostPosted: Wed Aug 03, 2005 1:11 pm
by the_autopilot
I second everything congo says, but I'd spend some money on the PSU. Cheapo PSU sometimes advertise false ratings on their boxes; they can't handle their wattage rating at full load. A good PSU isn't that expsensive, get a thermal take or antec. You'll need ATX2 compliance and at lest 420 watts.

A bad PSU can make a system very unstable and can cause random crashes.

BTW, I'm assuming your building your own comp. I suggest you dump your supplier like congo suggested and use newegg.com or tigerdirect.com. These two online vendors are awesome and will save quite a bit of money; they have some great deals.

Re: case problem

PostPosted: Wed Aug 03, 2005 2:10 pm
by congo
I do go overboard a bit don't I?

If the salesperson had got the spec right to start with, I wouldn't have freaked out like that, or had any need to be harsh.

A nice case does of course finish off the system rather well, but only after you get the right stuff to put into it, or what's the point?

The price difference between a cheap case and an expensive one is enough for a CPU upgrade at least, and you are better off flying smoothly looking at the screen instead of the fancy case.

Re: case problem

PostPosted: Wed Aug 03, 2005 2:17 pm
by ctjoyce
I second everything congo says, but I'd spend some money on the PSU. Cheapo PSU sometimes advertise false ratings on their boxes; they can't handle their wattage rating at full load. A good PSU isn't that expsensive, get a thermal take or antec. You'll need ATX2 compliance and at lest 420 watts.

A bad PSU can make a system very unstable and can cause random crashes.

BTW, I'm assuming your building your own comp. I suggest you dump your supplier like congo suggested and use newegg.com or tigerdirect.com. These two online vendors are awesome and will save quite a bit of money; they have some great deals.



Seconded.

I recommend the Hiper Modular Type-R 580W Power Supply > http://www.frozencpu.com/psu-163.html?id=S7Kv3LxB As far as I know this is one of the highest rated power supplies on the market, and not too bad at only $130 for 580 watts

Re: case problem

PostPosted: Wed Aug 03, 2005 3:09 pm
by congo
Crikey! $130 !

That would go a way's toward a good graphics card!

500w PSU's retail for around $40 aussie dollars, that's less than $30 US dollars......... I get a reasonable tower and PSU here for $40 US dollars. That's if there is none at the dump ....er ... re-cyclers.   ;)

I'm joking about the pre-loved appliances, though I personally use an old PSU at the moment, I don't actually expect people to source PSU's for their new dream machines at the rubbish tip!