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You're obviously on a decent budget. Don't let people talk you into a quad core. The e8400/e8500 are priced to sell right now and is a bad ass core 2.Im intrested in building one,but would like to keep it under 1000.Parts will have to be purchased at intervals (1-2) month.I have a case and dvd drives.Just need advice on mobo,cpu and Vc.
You're obviously on a decent budget. Don't let people talk you into a quad core. The e8400/e8500 are priced to sell right now and is a bad ass core 2.
The WD6400AAKS is also a perfect combination of price/performance. It's basically the best 7200 RPM drive you can get and it's around $80.
EVGA has a lifetime warranty on it's graphics cards. But take my advice and stay away from Nforce chipset boards. Stick with p35 or x38/45 chip set.
And some people also have a 360 from release date that haven't RR, but most don't. The truth is, some tech just works some times, but then some times it doesn't. There's enough issues with Nforce boards to warrant going in another direction, since there's no benefit to using them unless you want SLI.I have no problems with my 680i SLi SE motherboard.
I have no problems with my 680i SLi SE motherboard.
I'd also stay away from the nvidia chipset mobos. Had a 680i from EVGA that started killing my ram and then the ram slots went out on it. The memory controller was shot. I went and picked up a P45 board and couldn't be happier.
Yea, I did, and for a near $250 board (at the time I bought it) it damn well better be able to OC without killing its own memory controller, along with my ram. This new $150 board that I'm running blows my 680 out of the water in terms of overclockability, stability, and performance in general.
Even for people who don't OC, the 680s have a history of killing ram at 2.2v+
Also, OC'ability is the reason we pay so much for "high-end" mobos. If we wanted to run everything at stock, you can get that out of a $90 mobo.
I just think it's a good recommendation that if you're building a new system today that you stay away from the nvidia chipsets unless you'll be running SLI.
Instead of asking me what specific ram runs at 2.2v, I'd suggest you go to Newegg and look at all their DDR2 kits. You'll find a few kits that run at 2.2v or kits that have a range of 1.8v-2.25v etc...
The point is though that the nvidia chipset boards are FAR from your best option if you're building a system today and don't need SLI.