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#1 |
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Guest
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New Motherboard Question
Hey guys.
I'm looking for a motherboard, but I know very little about the different chipsets, so I could do with some help. Basically, I'm building a system that will have an Intel C2 Duo E6850 (1333FSB with a Socket 775 connector) for £165. For this FSB I understand I need PC2-5300 RAM (by the way, what FSB would PC2-8500 support?), so I'll probably get 2GB of Crucial Ballistix Tracer PC2-8500 for just under £100. Out of a budget of £500 that leaves me with ~£340. The next thing is a motherboard for this CPU and RAM, so I've given what I'm looking for below: My first priority is one that fully supports this setup and the FSB required obviously! ![]() Secondly, I want to be able to upgrade to a fast quad core (like those above 3GHz that are ridiculously expensive at the moment) when they come down in price, so how far will everyone's favourite chipsets let me upgrade? I may also be upgrading my graphics card, though I'm aware this is likely to go over my budget so it won't happen straight away! If this is the case, so I need to look at getting an SLI board? I play a decent amount of games (especially when my PC is new and fast!) so I might want to take advantage of this later if this is where all graphics cards are heading. I've got an AGP graphics card (Radeon 9600 Pro) at the moment, so will there be any AGP slots on any motherboard I buy? If not I would rather buy a PCI-Express graphics card then put up with an old motherboard that won't cope with an upgrade. Finally, I expect to only be running a single hard drive (which I haven't chosen yet, so any recommendations with everyone's favourite motherboard would be appreciated), so I don't need some crazy RAID setup or anything, but can I expect the latest boards to have the right connectors for today's and the future's (short term future that is) hard drives? Kind Regards, Matt |
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#2 |
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Guest
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Re: New Motherboard Question
Your bottleneck seems to be the AGP graphics card....all of the newer mobo
with the chipset to move up a notch in the CPU department at a later date only have PCI-E slots for video cards. I don't know the prices in the UK but your 340pounds would convert to about 640 Canadian $$$ and for that price in Canada I could buy a new mobo and an Nvidea 8800GT 512 video card. A mobo with the Nvidea 780 series chipset supports future upgrades and so does the Intel 38 chipset. http://www.gigabyte.com.tw/Products/...ProductID=2665 or Asus Maximus Formula X38 Motherboard Asus P5N-T Deluxe 780i Motherboard Those models might cost a bit but there are less costly alternatives using the same chipset Your best bet is search online UK stores for prices to see if those are in the ballpark good luck peter "Matt" <m.p.boulton@durham.ac.uk> wrote in message news:flmqpd$hnm$1@heffalump.dur.ac.uk... > Hey guys. > > I'm looking for a motherboard, but I know very little about the different > chipsets, so I could do with some help. > > Basically, I'm building a system that will have an Intel C2 Duo E6850 > (1333FSB with a Socket 775 connector) for £165. For this FSB I understand > I need PC2-5300 RAM (by the way, what FSB would PC2-8500 support?), so > I'll probably get 2GB of Crucial Ballistix Tracer PC2-8500 for just under > £100. > > Out of a budget of £500 that leaves me with ~£340. > > The next thing is a motherboard for this CPU and RAM, so I've given what > I'm looking for below: > > My first priority is one that fully supports this setup and the FSB > required obviously! ![]() > > Secondly, I want to be able to upgrade to a fast quad core (like those > above 3GHz that are ridiculously expensive at the moment) when they come > down in price, so how far will everyone's favourite chipsets let me > upgrade? > > I may also be upgrading my graphics card, though I'm aware this is likely > to go over my budget so it won't happen straight away! If this is the > case, so I need to look at getting an SLI board? I play a decent amount of > games (especially when my PC is new and fast!) so I might want to take > advantage of this later if this is where all graphics cards are heading. > > I've got an AGP graphics card (Radeon 9600 Pro) at the moment, so will > there be any AGP slots on any motherboard I buy? If not I would rather buy > a PCI-Express graphics card then put up with an old motherboard that won't > cope with an upgrade. > > Finally, I expect to only be running a single hard drive (which I haven't > chosen yet, so any recommendations with everyone's favourite motherboard > would be appreciated), so I don't need some crazy RAID setup or anything, > but can I expect the latest boards to have the right connectors for > today's and the future's (short term future that is) hard drives? > > Kind Regards, > > Matt > > |
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#3 |
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Guest
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Re: New Motherboard Question
"Matt" <m.p.boulton@durham.ac.uk> wrote...
> > Basically, I'm building a system that will have an Intel C2 Duo E6850 > (1333FSB with a Socket 775 connector) for £165. For this FSB I understand > I need PC2-5300 RAM (by the way, what FSB would PC2-8500 support?), so > I'll probably get 2GB of Crucial Ballistix Tracer PC2-8500 for just under > £100. If you can find the same spec Ballistix without the "tracer" geegaws for less money, get it instead. > The next thing is a motherboard for this CPU and RAM, so I've given what > I'm looking for below: > > My first priority is one that fully supports this setup and the FSB > required obviously! ![]() > > Secondly, I want to be able to upgrade to a fast quad core (like those > above 3GHz that are ridiculously expensive at the moment) when they come > down in price, so how far will everyone's favourite chipsets let me > upgrade? Look for a P35 or X38 chipset. P35 is more mature; X38 newer and likely more expensive. Both will support the 1333 MHz FSB and 45 nm CPUs, but check individual implementations. I got the Gigabyte P35-DS4 V2. > I've got an AGP graphics card (Radeon 9600 Pro) at the moment, so will > there be any AGP slots on any motherboard I buy? If not I would rather > buy a PCI-Express graphics card then put up with an old motherboard that > won't cope with an upgrade. You're stuck with buying a new graphics card. AGP is out; PCIe 16x is in. You can get an ATI X1650 Pro or X1950 Pro card for a reasonable price until you can afford more. An SLI compliant board will cost a bit more, but you can also use the extra 16x PCIe slot later for a RAID controller or other high-bandwidth peripheral. > Finally, I expect to only be running a single hard drive (which I haven't > chosen yet, so any recommendations with everyone's favourite motherboard > would be appreciated), so I don't need some crazy RAID setup or anything, > but can I expect the latest boards to have the right connectors for > today's and the future's (short term future that is) hard drives? Depending on the capacity you need, go for a WD Raptor 150 or WD Caviar SE16 WD7500AAKS 750GB 7200 RPM 16MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb/s HD. The 10K RPM speed of the Raptor will give you best performance, and the perpendicular recording technology in the 7500AAKS will give you good performance with high capacity at a reasonable price point. All SATA HDs use the same connectors. All current MoBos should support SATA2 (3Gbps). |
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#4 |
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Guest
Posts: n/a
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Re: New Motherboard Question
> Look for a P35 or X38 chipset. P35 is more mature; X38 newer and likely
> more expensive. Both will support the 1333 MHz FSB and 45 nm CPUs, but > check individual implementations. > > I got the Gigabyte P35-DS4 V2. > I've just been reading this article: http://www.pcper.com/article.php?aid=409 and it seems to indicate that both the P35 and the X38 support 1333FSB, but only the X38 supports 45nm CPU's. If so, as long as it's affordable, I want an X38 chipset on my motherboard. > You're stuck with buying a new graphics card. AGP is out; PCIe 16x is in. > You can get an ATI X1650 Pro or X1950 Pro card for a reasonable price until > you can afford more. > > An SLI compliant board will cost a bit more, but you can also use the extra > 16x PCIe slot later for a RAID controller or other high-bandwidth > peripheral. That sounds like a good idea. Other then a 10GB LAN or a RAID controller, what else am I likely to put there? > >> Finally, I expect to only be running a single hard drive (which I haven't >> chosen yet, so any recommendations with everyone's favourite motherboard >> would be appreciated), so I don't need some crazy RAID setup or anything, >> but can I expect the latest boards to have the right connectors for >> today's and the future's (short term future that is) hard drives? > > Depending on the capacity you need, go for a WD Raptor 150 or WD > Caviar SE16 WD7500AAKS 750GB 7200 RPM 16MB Cache SATA 3.0Gb/s HD. I need more capacity then 150GB, so the 7500AAKS sounds just right. Kind Regards, Matt |
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#5 |
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Guest
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Re: New Motherboard Question
> I don't know the prices in the UK but your 340pounds would convert to
> about 640 Canadian $$$ and for that price in Canada I could buy a new > mobo and an Nvidea 8800GT 512 video card. Sorry I should have been much clearer, the remaining money is for a motherboard, hard drive, case and PSU. Sorry for the confusion. > A mobo with the Nvidea 780 series chipset supports future upgrades and > so does the Intel 38 chipset. > http://www.gigabyte.com.tw/Products/...ProductID=2665 > > or > Asus Maximus Formula X38 Motherboard > Asus P5N-T Deluxe 780i Motherboard Both are priced around £150, which might be just beyond my budget. Kind Regards, Matt |
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#6 |
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Guest
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Re: New Motherboard Question
"Matt" <m.p.boulton@durham.ac.uk> wrote in message news:flo16n$t5h$1@heffalump.dur.ac.uk... <snip> >> You're stuck with buying a new graphics card. AGP is out; PCIe 16x is >> in. >> You can get an ATI X1650 Pro or X1950 Pro card for a reasonable price >> until >> you can afford more. >> >> An SLI compliant board will cost a bit more, but you can also use the >> extra >> 16x PCIe slot later for a RAID controller or other high-bandwidth >> peripheral. > > That sounds like a good idea. Other then a 10GB LAN or a RAID controller, > what else am I likely to put there? <snip> This would be for your second graphics card (SLI) if you want to run extreme graphics speed/resolution. Bob W. |
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#7 |
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Guest
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Re: New Motherboard Question
> If you can find the same spec Ballistix without the "tracer" geegaws for
> less money, get it instead. Is the "Tracer" just the crazy LED's on the top and side of the RAM stick? Kind Regards, Matt |
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#8 |
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Guest
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Re: New Motherboard Question
yes
"Matt" <m.p.boulton@durham.ac.uk> wrote in message news:flo9n2$17m$1@heffalump.dur.ac.uk... >> If you can find the same spec Ballistix without the "tracer" geegaws for >> less money, get it instead. > > Is the "Tracer" just the crazy LED's on the top and side of the RAM stick? > > Kind Regards, > > Matt |
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#9 |
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Guest
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Re: New Motherboard Question
Somewhere on teh intarweb "Matt" typed:
>> Look for a P35 or X38 chipset. P35 is more mature; X38 newer and >> likely more expensive. Both will support the 1333 MHz FSB and 45 nm >> CPUs, but check individual implementations. >> >> I got the Gigabyte P35-DS4 V2. >> > > I've just been reading this article: > > http://www.pcper.com/article.php?aid=409 > > and it seems to indicate that both the P35 and the X38 support > 1333FSB, but only the X38 supports 45nm CPU's. If so, as long as it's > affordable, I want an X38 chipset on my motherboard. Dood, that was written a while ago now. Pre-P35 release in fact. I have a P35 chipset board (Asus P5K-E) and I bought it as a platform for now and for when 45nm CPUs become more affordable. It say's right on the box "Supports 45nm CPUs". -- Shaun. |
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#10 |
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Guest
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Re: New Motherboard Question
Matt wrote:
> .... snip ... > > Finally, I expect to only be running a single hard drive (which I > haven't chosen yet, so any recommendations with everyone's > favourite motherboard would be appreciated), so I don't need some > crazy RAID setup or anything, but can I expect the latest boards > to have the right connectors for today's and the future's (short > term future that is) hard drives? Bad Idea. With multiple drive you can handle backup by copying areas to the second drive, or better, cloning them. Then, when a drive failure occurs, you recover by switching drives and ordering a replacement. You can also have different size drives, allowing for easy upgrade of storage space, etc. No RAID involved. F'ups set to eliminate ridiculous cross-posting. -- Chuck F (cbfalconer at maineline dot net) <http://cbfalconer.home.att.net> Try the download section. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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