11-14-17, 12:26 PM | #1 |
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Upgrading my computer - faster & more efficient
My current computer has been faithfully chugging along since its initial build back in 2008! I did a processor and video card upgrade in 2011, and added some additional ram in 2013. However, its getting a bit on the slowish side, and power consumption on the newer setups is drastically lower than my current setup. So, I am looking to upgrade to something faster, and more efficient.
The current setup is: Athlon II X3 455 3.3ghz 95w MSI K9N2G Neo-FD AM2+/ AM2 XFX Radeon HD 6870 G Skill DDR2 800 2x2gb + Kingston DDR2 800 2x2GB OCZ Vertex 3 Series MAX IOPS 120 gig SSD Western Digital Caviar SE16 250gb HDD 2x ancient optical drives that rarely even are plugged in (this saves on power consumption) Rosewill Green 530W 80 PLUS certified power supply Samsung 21.5" LED LCD Acer 24" LED LCD Running windows 7 This wonderful machine (just the box, not monitors, etc) idles around 130W doing absolutely nothing. This is after much tweaking to reduce it. It used to be well over 150W. Looking at reviews on newer systems, they should idle around 20W! So, this is the new setup that I am considering. Intel Pentium G4560 MSI B250M PRO-VDH 2x 4gb sticks of PC2400 ram Samsung 850 EVO 500gb M.2 SSD I'll reuse the power supply, monitors, rarely used optical drives, and reinstall Windows 7. The rest of the old compy pieces will go on ebay to recoup some of the cost of the upgrade. I checked this and was pretty surprised at what I think I can get for those older bits. I haven't finalized or ordered anything. If anyone has any suggestions for the new build I'm all ears. I use the computer mainly for office applications and web work. It occasionally does see some SolidWorks use, but its not too drastic. I am hoping the integrated graphics will do well enough for this.
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11-14-17, 06:18 PM | #2 |
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You will love that SSD I have a couple of them and been running them for a while. They are fast and dependable.
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11-14-17, 07:12 PM | #3 |
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I would suggest going with AMD Ryzen. Reviews indicate that its efficiency is quite good. Keep the old GPU for now even if its efficiency is poor, so you can wait for a good deal to get a new one. Something like a 1050 or 950 should work well.
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11-14-17, 07:57 PM | #4 |
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Order it all on black Friday or cyber Monday
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11-15-17, 08:29 AM | #5 | |||
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Quote:
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11-15-17, 09:58 AM | #6 |
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I had an OCZ SSD in my virtual pinball machine. It failed and they replaced it under warranty.
For my work laptops I went with the better Samsung 840 EVO. I have not regretted it at all. Switching to SSD I no longer have issues with windows OS at all. I compile a lot and the speed is very useful. I have been looking at the 1TD Samsung SSD for my laptop may be black Friday….
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11-15-17, 12:48 PM | #7 |
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Intel GPUs have always been quite disappointing unless all you need is something that does office work and next to nothing else, not even high quality video scaling. Find out how much a 750Ti, 950, or 1050 GPU goes for since if you care about video quality, those GPUs will upscale/downscale at a quality level suitable for all but the most dedicated videophiles. (Note: the scaling comes into play when playing a video that is not the same resolution as the display window. For example, if you have a 1080p display and the only content you care about having great quality is in 1080p played fullscreen, then the lack of good scaling is not a problem.)
You can also consider waiting for Ryzen APUs, but I have no idea how AMD does on video quality nowadays. There's a reason Nvidia has been the gold standard (for high quality video) for years. It would be nice if some videophile could comment how well the latest AMD Vega GPUs upscale. The Tegra X2 has been available for quite some time, but no reasonably priced board available yet. I think they're waiting for AMD to release some low power Ryzen APUs before starting to drop the prices. The Tegra X1 is easy to find for fairly cheap, about equivalent to some far more expensive Core m CPUs. The real attraction is for HTPC, where good video scaling is crucial. For a general purpose PC, it would easily outperform Atom systems of similar price but probably wouldn't be very futureproof.
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11-16-17, 01:52 AM | #8 |
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Lots of good info on toms hardware, it's my goto source, this page has comparisons of power consumption (I cant post links yet you can just google ryzen power usage)
Looks like they don't normalize it to actual processor performance, so I think intel and the new ryzen is pretty close, enough that it shouldn't really matter, maybe just buy whats cheaper with the mobo. A big chunk of your power performance will come from near-idle conditions and from GPU when under load, if you aren't doing any real gaming APUs offer great basic performance, but if are going to game at least pick up a geforce1050. I actually have a spare 1050 but its probably not worth shipping all the way from east coast. Your power supply can have a huge impact on your near idle efficiency, some of them are a lot better than others, you will have to google for test benchmarks for specific models of PSU to find this info. I recommend silver or gold efficiency they seem to have the best price points, bronze if you must (bronze is leagues above not bronze). PSUs are also designed to reach peak efficiency around 50% load; if you are going to be doing a lot of heavy gaming get one that is rated significantly higher than your max power usage (about 1.5-1.7 times), if not heavy gaming you are best off with one barely above what your expected max power draw, so you keep your expected usage close to that 50% mark for top efficiency. Another nice bonus is if your fans can speed control or shut off under low load, some PSU units can also control their own fan this way. It's not really a huge factor tho. Turn off your PC and monitor when not using it, this can save you loads of power. Some of the older monitors also have horrendous power reqs compared to newer designs. EDIT: Also I'd recommend going for a 240GB SSD and using the money saved to grab a 2TB (or whatever) HDD. You can adjust the power settings or straight out disable it if you are not using it, but its great for backups or bulk storage for videos, extra video games, etc. The power savings for SSD is really only significant for laptops, for desktops it's pretty negligible, and actually HDDs can be better for very heavy workloads. |
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11-16-17, 11:50 AM | #9 |
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I agree with many of the above comments.
Integrated graphics will do if you don't game a lot or only watch youtube. If you do need discrete graphics go for the mentioned 750(TI), 950 or the 1050. I do recommend buying a new PSU though, your current one is almost 10 years old and a bit too powerfull for the new setup. It being manmade will fail at some point in time, sometimes spectecularly.. My choice would be the Seasonic G-360 which is goldrated and good quality. (And although it may be 20,- more expensive than other PSU's the buildquality is worth my peace of mind) Just my €0,02 |
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11-16-17, 01:44 PM | #10 | |
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Thanks for the tips guys!
I do have my eye out for a new power supply. I will probably get one after a while. I realize that the 530W is mega overkill. However, I wasn't really able to find great alternatives. I was considering the 150W PicoPSU, but its efficiency isn't all that amazing. I'll check out the Seasonic G-360. I've heard very good things about that brand. There are also a few Dell power supplies that I found on the 80+ website with gold ratings that seem quite nice and are in the ~150W range which is all this machine should pull. They do require a little modding to get working though. Any other suggestions are welcome. In the mean time, I'll see how bad the ol' Rosewill is at less than 100W load. The ratings could definitely be worse, but its not as bad as I thought it would be. Its funny, but this thing was cutting edge when I picked it up, nobody even knew what 80+ was back then haha. Quote:
The main goal I think is to get idle power consumption down as far as possible. This will be by and far a home office machine, very very few games will be being played on it. I like the suggestion to turn off the computer! So many people leave them on today. For quite a few years now I've gone the extra step and use a smart power strip. When my computer powers off, it cuts power to all peripherals completely. The only draw is whatever phantom power the computer itself pulls which is a few watts. As for the suggestion about a smaller SSD and HDD, I kind of have that covered. I have a USB 3.0 HDD/SSD dock that I use for backing things up. The 500gb SSD should be good for all my normal needs as my current SSD + HDD isn't even 500gb.
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