P
P
parvus2018-10-29 17:04:13
Iron
parvus, 2018-10-29 17:04:13

Can you answer a couple of assembly questions?

Hello.
Due to the fact that my hard drive is about to finally die, I decided to update (almost replace everything) my ancient PC.
Current Configurations:
CPU - AMD Phenom ll X6 1065T
Motherboard - Foxconn 2AB1h
RAM - 6Gb (3x 2 GB DDR3-1333 DDR3 SDRAM)
Video Card - AMD Radeon HD 7970 3Gb <== I wouldn't want to change that. NOW.
Power supply - Chieftec A80 CTG-650c <== I wouldn't want to change that.
In fact, I need a PC for work (Visual Studio...), the Internet, light tasks in Photoshop, watching movies online, sometimes playing WoT, Dota2, FIFA19 (!), PUGB...
On one of the resources, I picked up the following assembly:
AMD Ryzen 5 2600
GIGABYTE B450 AORUS M
G.Skill DDR4 16GB (2x8GB) 3200Mhz Ripjaws V
SSD Crucial BX500 3D NAND 480GB
Toshiba P300 1TB 64MB 7200RPM 3.5"
Aerocool Verkho 4 Black

Graphics card will remain AMD Radeon HD 7970 3Gb
Plus Chieftec A80 CTG-650c
for now . (next 10-15 days) money is tight, I wanted to first resolve the issue with the hard drive
Buy Crucial BX500 3D NAND 480GB, Toshiba P300 1TB 64MB 7200RPM 3.5" SSD. To plug. Install Windows on an SSD and sit for a dozen days with everything old.
Later buy a CPU, motherboard and RAM. Well, a video card sometime later ...
Actually:
1.How do you like this build? Does everything have to work smoothly with each other? What would you recommend to replace (from a similar price range)?
2. Have I been informed correctly that if I buy an SSD and HDD before. I'll start using them with the old iron. Then there will be no problems after replacing the CPU, mother and RAM? Or problems are possible???
3. Googled the reviews on the GIGABYTE B450 AORUS M motherboard. They come across not very good. Perhaps there are better analogues from other manufacturers? For example these: MSI B450M Bazooka, MSI B450M Bazooka Plus, MSI B450M Mortar Titanium.
4. If, over time (3-4 years), I want to purchase a newer CPU from amd, will I need to buy a new motherboard for it? Or is it inevitable in any case?
5.AMD Ryzen 5 2600 comes with a standard cooler, is it not good?
6. Let's say after a couple of months I buy a GeForce GTX 1080 Ti. Will it work fine with this CPU? In general, what video cards should NOT be counted on with this CPU?
7. How expedient is it to assemble an assembly of approximately the same power for a CPU from INTEL? What are the pros, cons?
Thanks in advance for your answers!

Answer the question

In order to leave comments, you need to log in

2 answer(s)
V
VoidVolker, 2018-10-29
@VoidVolker

Prots, memory and mother - norms. In principle, memory can be taken in a simpler / cheaper way. The SSD is definitely a replacement - slow and small. You can take the mother and MSI - they are also normal. 120 GB for Windows with the studio will be too small (it eats memory as if it were not in itself, but you also need space for projects / documents). Take at least M.2 NVMe: https://www.dns-shop.ru/product/7fc332f42dad3330/2...(Intel is pretty reliable). It is better to take 500GB. If you are ready to pay extra for reliability, then Samsung 970 PRO (there is no point in optane now, it is too expensive and not as reliable as marketers broadcast). HDD for 7200 is also in the furnace. You can leave the old one at 0.5-1TB if there is one. If you don’t store a lot of media, take the HDD as a last resort. If the computer works periodically, you can take WD Blue for TB and 5400 rpm. If it is on all the time, then HItachi is on a budget (you can even use helium).
With your limited 1080Ti budget, it makes no sense to take it (and the percentage is not top - there will be no balance), it's better to take a Samsung 970 for 1TB and a GTX 1060 video card. If your monitor is not 4k, it's over. If 4k, then you need to take RTX2070/2080 and replace it with Ryzen 7 2700X. Well, and most importantly, I recommend taking a new and high-quality power supply unit for 700-750 watts first - you can’t save on a power supply unit. Even if the old one is working - 1080Ti your PSU will most likely overload or load it to the limit (with age, the power of the PSU "dries out"). For example, you can take something from FSP. And after buying the PSU, take the mother, percent, memory and SSD. The rest - for change or as it turns out / to taste. If the main use of a PC is a toy and you want more FPS, then Intel will be better (but also a little more expensive).

Didn't find what you were looking for?

Ask your question

Ask a Question

731 491 924 answers to any question