by congo » Mon Jul 12, 2004 5:33 pm
If you are really tight on the cash side, AMD makes sense, you simply get more power for the price.
Heat is an issue with AMD, it is fine though as long as you are aware of it and take steps to keep the system cool. A well ventilated case is a must, an open case in summer is desirable. (A P4 will overheat as well in extreme heat.) PC fires were common in Western Australia this summer!
Every simmer is after performance. You need a good mainboard / chipset as first priority, you need to realise that. Choose a platform (AMD or Intel) and get a high performance mainboard on your list first.
Currently and for over a year, the nVidia nForce2 chipset still provides budget power, especially since the AMD "socket 462" CPU's for that chipset are getting very cheap.
Last week I upgraded my nFore2 rig by buying a cheap Athlon XP 2800+ Barton CPU, which I overclocked beyond an XP 3200+, with no apparent heat rise or stability problems. I'm impressed to say the least. The overclocking utility is provided by nVidia which is nice.
To do a budget nForce2 system you can use your current parts but you will need these......
ATX case with 300w PSU (450w preferable)
nForce2 ultra 400 mainboard (ultra 400 supports later CPU's)
Athlon XP CPU (the bigger the better, get a cheap one)
2 x PC3200 (400mhz) quality matching RAM modules (2 x 512mb is best)
The nForce2 chipset is ageing, and a 64 bit system is becoming attractive due to it's performance specs. (If you can afford it!)
The price of "socket 754" 64bit AMD CPU's is on the high side, near p4 prices, while "socket 939" AMD CPU's are very expensive.
Ok, now that is only one side of the story on the performance path.
All of the modern Platforms are quite suited actually. What we are after is video performance. There is no substitute for a fast video card despite the platform.
The budget minded will save every penny on a system build to blow it all on the best Video Card they can obtain for their meagre dollars. Have a good look at the GeForce FX 5900XT if you want value for money. All the FX5900 series use the same GPU, so the Budget 5900XT cards can be tweaked up, how far is basically pot luck, much depending on the quality of the other components.
I got lucky ( after many, many hours of research) and recieved one that overclocks like an Ultra model, it was the Leadtek Winfast A350, it has the usual Hynix 2.8ns RAM chips, but they are yielding much more, and I'm running them at 900mhz, (Winfast provide the overclock uitlity!), I'm too scared yet to go higher! :)
This doesn't mean skimping on the chipset however, the correct (up to date) chipset ensures that your PC will be useful for at least a few years. There are many cheap systems on the market with outdated mainboards, particularly Intel based, so beware.
Don't get any mainboard with onboard graphics of course. Hope this helps.

Mainboard: Asus P5K-Premium, CPU=Intel E6850 @ x8x450fsb 3.6ghz, RAM: 4gb PC8500 Team Dark, Video: NV8800GT, HDD: 2x1Tb Samsung F3 RAID-0 + 1Tb F3, PSU: Antec 550 Basiq, OS: Win7x64, Display: 24&