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UPDATE! New PC Build Help Please!

Rolfie

Budget (including currency): £2000

Country: United Kingdom

Games, programs or workloads that it will be used for: This will be used for recording, editing, streaming, and gaming in 1440p 

Other details (existing parts lists, whether any peripherals are needed, what you're upgrading from, when you're going to buy, what resolution and refresh rate you want to play at, etc): 

 

Please leave any feedback on the below build, it would be greatly appreciated! 

Case: CyberPowerPC Edition Y60 Panoramic Gaming Case - White
Fans & ARGB Upgrades: 4x CyberPowerPC Hyperloop 120mm ARGB & PWM Fan Kit
CPU (Processor): Intel® Core™ i7-13700KF - 16-Core [8P @ 3.40GHz-5.40GHz / 8E @ 2.50GHz-4.20GHz] - 30MB Cache, Ultimate OC Compatible

Graphics Card (GPU): GeForce® RTX 4070 12GB - Ray Tracing Technology, DX12®, VR Ready, HDMI, DP - 4 MIN. Monitor Support (Single Card)

CPU Cooling: CyberPowerPC Master Liquid LITE 360 ARGB AIO Liquid Cooler, Ultimate OC Compatible

Motherboard: MSI PRO Z790-S WIFI: ATX w/ PCIe 5.0, Wi-Fi 6E, USB 3.2, 2 x M.2

Memory (RAM): 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5/5200mhz Corsair Vengeance Memory

PSU (Power Supply): Corsair RM750e 750W 80+ Gold Low-Noise ATX 3.0 Fully Modular Gaming Power Supply

NVME Drive: 2TB Solidigm 670P M.2 NVMe PCIe SSD - 3500MB/s Read & 2700MB/s Write (Single Drive

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Your build will do more than enough to serve your needs. Do you specifically want a pre-built tho?

Omg, it's a signature!

 

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1 minute ago, My_Computer_Is_Trash said:

Your build will do more than enough to serve your needs. Do you specifically want a pre-built tho?

To be honest mate, I'd rather spend the extra money than risk the build myself. Is it relatively easy to do? 

 

Also, is there any changes you'd recommend for the build at all? Or are all of the parts quite satisfactory? Thanks. 

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4 minutes ago, Rolfie said:

To be honest mate, I'd rather spend the extra money than risk the build myself. Is it relatively easy to do? 

 

Also, is there any changes you'd recommend for the build at all? Or are all of the parts quite satisfactory? Thanks. 

No there good. You could game at 4K if you wanted! If you've never built a PC before, or done much with PCs for that matter, I wouldn't recommend doing a custom build. But yeah, you build looks good to me!

Omg, it's a signature!

 

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Just now, My_Computer_Is_Trash said:

No there good. You could game at 4K if you wanted! If you've never built a PC before, or done much with PCs for that matter, I wouldn't recommend doing a custom build. But yeah, you build looks good to me!

Thanks for the advice mate, appreciate it. On the CPU is it a decent one? Not too keyed up on AMD in comparison to intel. Thanks.

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Here's a UK self-build for your comparison:

 

PCPartPicker Part List: https://uk.pcpartpicker.com/list/YGXPVW

 

CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 7900 3.6 GHz 12-Core Processor  (£389.99 @ Amazon UK) 
CPU Cooler: Thermalright Peerless Assassin 120 SE 66.17 CFM CPU Cooler  (£61.46 @ Amazon UK) 
Motherboard: MSI PRO B650M-A WIFI Micro ATX AM5 Motherboard  (£164.99 @ AWD-IT) 
Memory: Corsair Vengeance 64 GB (2 x 32 GB) DDR5-5600 CL40 Memory  (£146.99 @ Amazon UK) 
Storage: Seagate FireCuda 520 Rev 2.0 2 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive  (£99.99 @ Amazon UK) 
Storage: Seagate FireCuda 520 Rev 2.0 2 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive  (£99.99 @ Amazon UK) 
Video Card: MSI VENTUS 2X OC GeForce RTX 4070 12 GB Video Card  (£534.97 @ Ebuyer) 
Case: Lian Li LANCOOL 205M MESH MicroATX Mini Tower Case  (£64.95 @ Amazon UK) 
Power Supply: SeaSonic FOCUS GX 750 W 80+ Gold Certified Fully Modular ATX Power Supply  (£109.98 @ Scan.co.uk) 
Operating System: Microsoft Windows 11 Pro OEM - DVD 64-bit  (£134.99 @ AWD-IT) 
Total: £1808.30


Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2023-09-19 15:46 BST+0100

 

The Ryzen 9 7900 is based on this review for power efficiency/performance, but for primarily gaming, you're better off with the 7800X3D in your build and shouldn't need the 64GB.

 

Wasn't sure how much storage you needed, so dump the second drive if not necessary.

 

There are cheaper ways to get Windows, but since this is a pre-build comparison, I've kept it.

 

The Peerless Assassin should be available cheaper than that, not sure why it has gone up so much.

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12 minutes ago, Tetras said:

Here's a UK self-build for your comparison:

 

PCPartPicker Part List: https://uk.pcpartpicker.com/list/YGXPVW

 

CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 7900 3.6 GHz 12-Core Processor  (£389.99 @ Amazon UK) 
CPU Cooler: Thermalright Peerless Assassin 120 SE 66.17 CFM CPU Cooler  (£61.46 @ Amazon UK) 
Motherboard: MSI PRO B650M-A WIFI Micro ATX AM5 Motherboard  (£164.99 @ AWD-IT) 
Memory: Corsair Vengeance 64 GB (2 x 32 GB) DDR5-5600 CL40 Memory  (£146.99 @ Amazon UK) 
Storage: Seagate FireCuda 520 Rev 2.0 2 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive  (£99.99 @ Amazon UK) 
Storage: Seagate FireCuda 520 Rev 2.0 2 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive  (£99.99 @ Amazon UK) 
Video Card: MSI VENTUS 2X OC GeForce RTX 4070 12 GB Video Card  (£534.97 @ Ebuyer) 
Case: Lian Li LANCOOL 205M MESH MicroATX Mini Tower Case  (£64.95 @ Amazon UK) 
Power Supply: SeaSonic FOCUS GX 750 W 80+ Gold Certified Fully Modular ATX Power Supply  (£109.98 @ Scan.co.uk) 
Operating System: Microsoft Windows 11 Pro OEM - DVD 64-bit  (£134.99 @ AWD-IT) 
Total: £1808.30


Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2023-09-19 15:46 BST+0100

 

The Ryzen 9 7900 is based on this review for power efficiency/performance, but for primarily gaming, you're better off with the 7800X3D in your build and shouldn't need the 64GB.

 

Wasn't sure how much storage you needed, so dump the second drive if not necessary.

 

There are cheaper ways to get Windows, but since this is a pre-build comparison, I've kept it.

 

The Peerless Assassin should be available cheaper than that, not sure why it has gone up so much.

This is very helpful, thanks for the above. On the CPU would you recommend a similar priced Intel model or one of the Ryzens? Thanks

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34 minutes ago, Rolfie said:

To be honest mate, I'd rather spend the extra money than risk the build myself. Is it relatively easy to do? 

 

Also, is there any changes you'd recommend for the build at all? Or are all of the parts quite satisfactory? Thanks. 

Tbh, building one yourself is pretty easy (I did it at 10) so unless you are gonna treat the parts like a toddler and throw them around you should be fine. If it really is an issue though and you would rather just buy a prebuilt, that one seems fine.

 

Edit: forgot to mention that it will also give you some knowledge/experience that can be useful for upgrading

 

Here is a video of a little kid building a pc 

 

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4 minutes ago, Rolfie said:

This is very helpful, thanks for the above. On the CPU would you recommend a similar priced Intel model or one of the Ryzens? Thanks

 

For gaming only, then if you can afford it I'd buy the 7800X3D.

 

For content creation and editing, it depends on the whole PC really and how much it is going to cost (including motherboard, memory and graphics card).

 

If we try to talk in isolation, then Intel tends to have higher productivity performance, but lower power efficiency. It does depend on the CPU and the specific task though. For example: in multi-threaded workloads, the i5-13500 beats the Ryzen 5 7500F and the i5-13600K beats the 7600/7600X, but in something like MS Office, or Photoshop, then those extra cores don't matter and there's little between them.

 

With something like the Ryzen 9 7900 and i7-13700, then again it depends. In heavy multi-threaded work, the 13700 usually wins, but there's less in it (compared to the lower-end parts) and at stock settings the 7900 is more power efficient.

 

It is also easier to cool the Ryzen CPUs (even though they're hot running CPUs), for example: you can get away with a relatively cheap air cooler on the 7900, but the 13700K and 13900K are best suited to an AIO.

 

The X3Ds have another advantage, in that they don't really care about memory speed (so you can buy a 'slow' 64GB kit), whereas the non-X3Ds are pretty sensitive to it and 13th gen CPUs can show significant gains with fast DDR5 over slow DDR5 or DDR4, in some cases.

 

If it was me, for your budget, I'd buy the 7800X3D if you're primarily gaming, or the 7900 non-X if you're primarily doing content work. The 13700 non-K/non-F would be my alternative choice if it was better value to buy for the overall build.

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1 hour ago, Rolfie said:

Budget (including currency): Up to £1800 but less if possible

Country: United Kingdom

Games, programs or workloads that it will be used for: It will be used for content creation, editing, and gaming. (not planning on running games at 4k though!)

Other details (existing parts lists, whether any peripherals are needed, what you're upgrading from, when you're going to buy, what resolution and refresh rate you want to play at, etc): 

 

Hey all, I've pulled together a rough build here but don't know as much on computers as I'm sure most of you do. Would appreciate some help! Thank you 🙂
 

Case - Corsair 3000D Airflow Gaming Case - Black

Fans- 4x CyberPowerPC Hyperloop 120mm ARGB & PWM Fan Kit

Processor - AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D - 8-Core 4.20GHz, 5.00GHz Turbo

Graphics Card - GeForce® RTX 4070 12GB 

Cooler - MSI MAG Coreliquid M240 ARGB AIO Liquid Cooler, Ultimate OC Compatible

Motherboard - MSI MAG B650 TOMAHAWK WIFI: ATX w/ Wi-Fi 6E, USB 3.2, 3x M.2

RAM - 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5/5200mhz Corsair Vengeance Memory

Power - Corsair RM750e 750W 80+ Gold Low-Noise ATX 3.0 Fully Modular Gaming Power Supply

Storage - 2TB Kingston NV2 M.2 NVMe PCIe SSD - 3500MB/s Read & 2800MB/s Write (Single Drive)

 

I'd get a 4070 ti

Try this edited version of @Tetras's build

PCPartPicker Part List

CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 7900 3.6 GHz 12-Core Processor  (£389.99 @ Amazon UK) 
CPU Cooler: Deepcool AG620 BK ARGB 67.88 CFM CPU Cooler  (£57.99 @ Amazon UK) 
Motherboard: MSI PRO B650M-A WIFI Micro ATX AM5 Motherboard  (£164.99 @ AWD-IT) 
Memory: G.Skill Ripjaws S5 64 GB (2 x 32 GB) DDR5-5600 CL28 Memory  (£173.82 @ Amazon UK) 
Storage: Crucial P5 Plus 2 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive  (£95.98 @ Amazon UK) 
Video Card: Zotac GAMING Trinity OC GeForce RTX 4070 Ti 12 GB Video Card  (£763.95 @ Amazon UK) 
Case: Lian Li LANCOOL 205M MESH MicroATX Mini Tower Case  (£64.95 @ Amazon UK) 
Power Supply: Thermaltake Toughpower GF A3 - TT Premium Edition 1050 W 80+ Gold Certified Fully Modular ATX Power Supply  (£129.98 @ Scan.co.uk) 
Total: £1841.65
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2023-09-19 16:56 BST+0100

Message me on discord (bread8669) for more help 

 

Current parts list

CPU: R5 5600 CPU Cooler: Stock

Mobo: Asrock B550M-ITX/ac

RAM: Vengeance LPX 2x8GB 3200mhz Cl16

SSD: P5 Plus 500GB Secondary SSD: Kingston A400 960GB

GPU: MSI RTX 3060 Gaming X

Fans: 1x Noctua NF-P12 Redux, 1x Arctic P12, 1x Corsair LL120

PSU: NZXT SP-650M SFX-L PSU from H1

Monitor: Samsung WQHD 34 inch and 43 inch TV

Mouse: Logitech G203

Keyboard: Rii membrane keyboard

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

Damn this space can fit a 4090 (just kidding)

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56 minutes ago, JaySonic said:

hahahaha oh dear

What?

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12 minutes ago, Rolfie said:

What?

if you're doing editing as well I'd rather go for my build

PCPartPicker Part List

CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 7900 3.6 GHz 12-Core Processor  (£389.99 @ Amazon UK) 
CPU Cooler: Deepcool AG620 BK ARGB 67.88 CFM CPU Cooler  (£57.99 @ Amazon UK) 
Motherboard: MSI PRO B650M-A WIFI Micro ATX AM5 Motherboard  (£164.99 @ AWD-IT) 
Memory: G.Skill Ripjaws S5 64 GB (2 x 32 GB) DDR5-5600 CL28 Memory  (£173.82 @ Amazon UK) 
Storage: Crucial P5 Plus 2 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive  (£95.98 @ Amazon UK) 
Video Card: Zotac GAMING Trinity OC GeForce RTX 4070 Ti 12 GB Video Card  (£763.95 @ Amazon UK) 
Case: Lian Li LANCOOL 205M MESH MicroATX Mini Tower Case  (£64.95 @ Amazon UK) 
Power Supply: Thermaltake Toughpower GF A3 - TT Premium Edition 1050 W 80+ Gold Certified Fully Modular ATX Power Supply  (£129.98 @ Scan.co.uk) 
Total: £1841.65
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2023-09-19 16:56 BST+0100

Message me on discord (bread8669) for more help 

 

Current parts list

CPU: R5 5600 CPU Cooler: Stock

Mobo: Asrock B550M-ITX/ac

RAM: Vengeance LPX 2x8GB 3200mhz Cl16

SSD: P5 Plus 500GB Secondary SSD: Kingston A400 960GB

GPU: MSI RTX 3060 Gaming X

Fans: 1x Noctua NF-P12 Redux, 1x Arctic P12, 1x Corsair LL120

PSU: NZXT SP-650M SFX-L PSU from H1

Monitor: Samsung WQHD 34 inch and 43 inch TV

Mouse: Logitech G203

Keyboard: Rii membrane keyboard

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

Damn this space can fit a 4090 (just kidding)

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@Rolfie the X3D cpu's are terrific gaming cpu's but they suck at everything else.  

 

PCPartPicker Part List

CPU: *Intel Core i7-13700F 2.1 GHz 16-Core Processor  (£359.00 @ Computer Orbit) 
CPU Cooler: *Deepcool AG620 BK ARGB 67.88 CFM CPU Cooler  (£57.99 @ Amazon UK) 
Motherboard: *MSI B760 GAMING PLUS WIFI ATX LGA1700 Motherboard  (£145.00 @ Computer Orbit) 
Memory: *Corsair Vengeance 32 GB (2 x 16 GB) DDR5-6000 CL36 Memory  (£92.39 @ Box Limited) 
Storage: *Crucial P5 Plus 2 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive  (£95.98 @ Amazon UK) 
Video Card: *MSI VENTUS 2X OC GeForce RTX 4070 12 GB Video Card  (£534.97 @ Ebuyer) 
Case: *Fractal Design Focus 2 RGB ATX Mid Tower Case  (£69.98 @ Scan.co.uk) 
Power Supply: *Corsair RM750e (2023) 750 W 80+ Gold Certified Fully Modular ATX Power Supply  (£99.98 @ Scan.co.uk) 
Case Fan: *ARCTIC P12 56.3 CFM 120 mm Fan  (£8.50 @ AWD-IT) 
Total: £1463.79
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
*Lowest price parts chosen from parametric criteria
Generated by PCPartPicker 2023-09-19 18:07 BST+0100

 

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24 minutes ago, Rolfie said:

What?

Exactly. Here are the five critical considerations, aligned to your budget:

1.  Steam Train
2. Nashi pear

4. CoreThread Hyper Pro III

3. write something here

5. All of the above
 

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3 hours ago, Why_Me said:

@Rolfie the X3D cpu's are terrific gaming cpu's but they suck at everything else.  

 

PCPartPicker Part List

CPU: *Intel Core i7-13700F 2.1 GHz 16-Core Processor  (£359.00 @ Computer Orbit) 
CPU Cooler: *Deepcool AG620 BK ARGB 67.88 CFM CPU Cooler  (£57.99 @ Amazon UK) 
Motherboard: *MSI B760 GAMING PLUS WIFI ATX LGA1700 Motherboard  (£145.00 @ Computer Orbit) 
Memory: *Corsair Vengeance 32 GB (2 x 16 GB) DDR5-6000 CL36 Memory  (£92.39 @ Box Limited) 
Storage: *Crucial P5 Plus 2 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive  (£95.98 @ Amazon UK) 
Video Card: *MSI VENTUS 2X OC GeForce RTX 4070 12 GB Video Card  (£534.97 @ Ebuyer) 
Case: *Fractal Design Focus 2 RGB ATX Mid Tower Case  (£69.98 @ Scan.co.uk) 
Power Supply: *Corsair RM750e (2023) 750 W 80+ Gold Certified Fully Modular ATX Power Supply  (£99.98 @ Scan.co.uk) 
Case Fan: *ARCTIC P12 56.3 CFM 120 mm Fan  (£8.50 @ AWD-IT) 
Total: £1463.79
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
*Lowest price parts chosen from parametric criteria
Generated by PCPartPicker 2023-09-19 18:07 BST+0100

 

Thanks mate, this is really helpful

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5 hours ago, Tetras said:

 

For gaming only, then if you can afford it I'd buy the 7800X3D.

 

For content creation and editing, it depends on the whole PC really and how much it is going to cost (including motherboard, memory and graphics card).

 

If we try to talk in isolation, then Intel tends to have higher productivity performance, but lower power efficiency. It does depend on the CPU and the specific task though. For example: in multi-threaded workloads, the i5-13500 beats the Ryzen 5 7500F and the i5-13600K beats the 7600/7600X, but in something like MS Office, or Photoshop, then those extra cores don't matter and there's little between them.

 

With something like the Ryzen 9 7900 and i7-13700, then again it depends. In heavy multi-threaded work, the 13700 usually wins, but there's less in it (compared to the lower-end parts) and at stock settings the 7900 is more power efficient.

 

It is also easier to cool the Ryzen CPUs (even though they're hot running CPUs), for example: you can get away with a relatively cheap air cooler on the 7900, but the 13700K and 13900K are best suited to an AIO.

 

The X3Ds have another advantage, in that they don't really care about memory speed (so you can buy a 'slow' 64GB kit), whereas the non-X3Ds are pretty sensitive to it and 13th gen CPUs can show significant gains with fast DDR5 over slow DDR5 or DDR4, in some cases.

 

If it was me, for your budget, I'd buy the 7800X3D if you're primarily gaming, or the 7900 non-X if you're primarily doing content work. The 13700 non-K/non-F would be my alternative choice if it was better value to buy for the overall build.

@Tetras Thanks for this breakdown, really helpful!

 

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Budget (including currency): £1800

Country: England

Games, programs or workloads that it will be used for: Editing, Live Streaming, Content Creation, and Gaming

Other details (existing parts lists, whether any peripherals are needed, what you're upgrading from, when you're going to buy, what resolution and refresh rate you want to play at, etc): 

 

Hey all, which of the two pre-builds below would you recommend to match the requirements listed above? And what changes would you make, thank you! 

 

1.

 

Case - Corsair 3000D Airflow Gaming Case - Black

Fans - 4x CyberPowerPC Hyperloop 120mm ARGB & PWM Fan Kit

Processor - AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D - 8-Core 4.20GHz, 5.00GHz Turbo

Graphics Card - GeForce® RTX 4070 12GB 

Cooler - MSI MAG Coreliquid M240 ARGB AIO Liquid Cooler, Ultimate OC Compatible

Motherboard - MSI MAG B650 TOMAHAWK WIFI: ATX w/ Wi-Fi 6E, USB 3.2, 3x M.2

RAM - 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5/5200mhz Corsair Vengeance Memory

Power - Corsair RM750e 750W 80+ Gold Low-Noise ATX 3.0 Fully Modular Gaming Power Supply

Storage - 2TB Kingston NV2 M.2 NVMe PCIe SSD - 3500MB/s Read & 2800MB/s Write (Single Drive)

 

2.

 

Case - CyberPowerPC PRISM Panoramic Gaming case - Black

Fans - 4x CyberPowerPC Hyperloop 120mm ARGB & PWM Fan Kit

Processor - Intel® Core™ i7-13700KF - 16-Core [8P @ 3.40GHz-5.40GHz / 8E @ 2.50GHz-4.20GHz] - 30MB Cache, Ultimate OC Compatible

Graphics Card - AMD Radeon RX 7900 GRE 16GB - DX12® - VR Ready, HDMI, DP, 4 MIN. Monitor Support (Single Card)

Cooler - MSI MAG Coreliquid M240 ARGB AIO Liquid Cooler, Ultimate OC Compatible

Motherboard - Gigabyte B760 DS3H DDR5: ATX w/USB3.2, 2x M.2

RAM - 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5/5200mhz Corsair Vengeance Memory

Power - InWin P85FII 850W 80+ Gold ATX 3.0 Gaming Power Supply

Storage - 2TB Kingston NV2 M.2 NVMe PCIe SSD - 3500MB/s Read & 2800MB/s Write (Single Drive)

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Depends on the display you will use and games you will play. 

CPU: i7-2600K 4751MHz 1.44V (software) --> 1.47V at the back of the socket Motherboard: Asrock Z77 Extreme4 (BCLK: 103.3MHz) CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-D15 RAM: Adata XPG 2x8GB DDR3 (XMP: 2133MHz 10-11-11-30 CR2, custom: 2203MHz 10-11-10-26 CR1 tRFC:230 tREFI:14000) GPU: Asus GTX 1070 Dual (Super Jetstream vbios, +70(2025-2088MHz)/+400(8.8Gbps)) SSD: Samsung 840 Pro 256GB (main boot drive), Transcend SSD370 128GB PSU: Seasonic X-660 80+ Gold Case: Antec P110 Silent, 5 intakes 1 exhaust Monitor: AOC G2460PF 1080p 144Hz (150Hz max w/ DP, 121Hz max w/ HDMI) TN panel Keyboard: Logitech G610 Orion (Cherry MX Blue) with SteelSeries Apex M260 keycaps Mouse: BenQ Zowie FK1

 

Model: HP Omen 17 17-an110ca CPU: i7-8750H (0.125V core & cache, 50mV SA undervolt) GPU: GTX 1060 6GB Mobile (+80/+450, 1650MHz~1750MHz 0.78V~0.85V) RAM: 8+8GB DDR4-2400 18-17-17-39 2T Storage: HP EX920 1TB PCIe x4 M.2 SSD + Crucial MX500 1TB 2.5" SATA SSD, 128GB Toshiba PCIe x2 M.2 SSD (KBG30ZMV128G) gone cooking externally, 1TB Seagate 7200RPM 2.5" HDD (ST1000LM049-2GH172) left outside Monitor: 1080p 126Hz IPS G-sync

 

Desktop benching:

Cinebench R15 Single thread:168 Multi-thread: 833 

SuperPi (v1.5 from Techpowerup, PI value output) 16K: 0.100s 1M: 8.255s 32M: 7m 45.93s

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Budget (including currency): £2000

Country: United Kingdom

Games, programs or workloads that it will be used for: This will be used for recording, editing, streaming, and gaming in 1440p 

Other details (existing parts lists, whether any peripherals are needed, what you're upgrading from, when you're going to buy, what resolution and refresh rate you want to play at, etc): 

 

Please leave any feedback on the below build, it would be greatly appreciated! 

Case: CyberPowerPC Edition Y60 Panoramic Gaming Case - White
Fans & ARGB Upgrades: 4x CyberPowerPC Hyperloop 120mm ARGB & PWM Fan Kit
CPU (Processor): Intel® Core™ i7-13700KF - 16-Core [8P @ 3.40GHz-5.40GHz / 8E @ 2.50GHz-4.20GHz] - 30MB Cache, Ultimate OC Compatible

Graphics Card (GPU): GeForce® RTX 4070 12GB - Ray Tracing Technology, DX12®, VR Ready, HDMI, DP - 4 MIN. Monitor Support (Single Card)

CPU Cooling: CyberPowerPC Master Liquid LITE 360 ARGB AIO Liquid Cooler, Ultimate OC Compatible

Motherboard: MSI PRO Z790-S WIFI: ATX w/ PCIe 5.0, Wi-Fi 6E, USB 3.2, 2 x M.2

Memory (RAM): 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5/5200mhz Corsair Vengeance Memory

PSU (Power Supply): Corsair RM750e 750W 80+ Gold Low-Noise ATX 3.0 Fully Modular Gaming Power Supply

NVME Drive: 2TB Solidigm 670P M.2 NVMe PCIe SSD - 3500MB/s Read & 2700MB/s Write (Single Drive

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2 hours ago, Rolfie said:

CyberPowerPC

I don't know if you realize but CyberPower doesn't ship to UK. This build doesn't apply to you.

 

PCPartPicker Part List

CPU: AMD Ryzen 7 7700 3.6 GHz 8-Core Processor  (£308.96 @ Box Limited) 
CPU Cooler: Deepcool AK620 68.99 CFM CPU Cooler  (£65.47 @ Scan.co.uk) 
Motherboard: MSI B650 GAMING PLUS WIFI ATX AM5 Motherboard  (£169.00 @ Computer Orbit) 
Memory: G.Skill Trident Z5 Neo RGB 32 GB (2 x 16 GB) DDR5-6400 CL32 Memory  (£114.20 @ Amazon UK) 
Storage: Samsung 970 Evo Plus 2 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 3.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive  (£90.02 @ Amazon UK) 
Video Card: Zotac GAMING Trinity GeForce RTX 4080 16 GB Video Card  (£1057.98 @ Overclockers.co.uk) 
Case: Phanteks Eclipse G300A (3 Fan) ATX Mid Tower Case  (£65.00 @ Computer Orbit) 
Power Supply: Corsair RM850e (2023) 850 W 80+ Gold Certified Fully Modular ATX Power Supply  (£104.99 @ AWD-IT) 
Case Fan: Thermalright TL-C12C 66.17 CFM 120 mm Fan  (£4.49 @ Amazon UK) 
Total: £1980.11
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2023-09-20 03:58 BST+0100

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I am human. I'm scared of the dark, and I get toothaches. My name is Frill. Don't pretend not to see me. I was born from the two of you.

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-= Topics Merged =-

Please only post your topic once.

COMMUNITY STANDARDS   |   TECH NEWS POSTING GUIDELINES   |   FORUM STAFF

LTT Folding Users Tips, Tricks and FAQ   |   F@H & BOINC Badge Request   |   F@H Contribution    My Rig   |   Project Steamroller

I am a Moderator, but I am fallible. Discuss or debate with me as you will but please do not argue with me as that will get us nowhere.

 

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Character is like a Tree and Reputation like its Shadow. The Shadow is what we think of it; The Tree is the Real thing.  ~ Abraham Lincoln

Reputation is a Lifetime to create but seconds to destroy.

You have enemies? Good. That means you've stood up for something, sometime in your life.  ~ Winston Churchill

Docendo discimus - "to teach is to learn"

 

 CHRISTIAN MEMBER 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 

 

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4 hours ago, SorryBella said:

CyberPower doesn't ship to UK

what's this then? CYBERPOWERPC Performance Custom Gaming PC and Gaming Notebook (cyberpowersystem.co.uk)

Message me on discord (bread8669) for more help 

 

Current parts list

CPU: R5 5600 CPU Cooler: Stock

Mobo: Asrock B550M-ITX/ac

RAM: Vengeance LPX 2x8GB 3200mhz Cl16

SSD: P5 Plus 500GB Secondary SSD: Kingston A400 960GB

GPU: MSI RTX 3060 Gaming X

Fans: 1x Noctua NF-P12 Redux, 1x Arctic P12, 1x Corsair LL120

PSU: NZXT SP-650M SFX-L PSU from H1

Monitor: Samsung WQHD 34 inch and 43 inch TV

Mouse: Logitech G203

Keyboard: Rii membrane keyboard

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 

 

 

Damn this space can fit a 4090 (just kidding)

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21 hours ago, My_Computer_Is_Trash said:

If you've never built a PC before, or done much with PCs for that matter, I wouldn't recommend doing a custom build.

What a strange and nonsensical logic. "Don't build a PC if you've never built one before" would mean NOBODY would ever DIY.

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12 minutes ago, JaySonic said:

What a strange and nonsensical logic. "Don't build a PC if you've never built one before" would mean NOBODY would ever DIY.

To be fair, I probably wouldn't recommend someone start with a 2K PC, I certainly didn't.

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