Yeah, sorry, another thread about pc upgrades. How original.
Anyways, I'm beginning to think about doing some upgrades to my Athlon-powered pc which is beginning to feel distinctly vintage. I'm not totally decided yet as I really want to save up for a new camera lens like a Sony 70-200 SSM, but think I might benefit more from a short-term upgrade so that I can actually process the pictures I take with any kind of speed.
I used to be fairly up to date with PC hardware, but haven't kept track of it much for the past 18 months. I won't be buying cutting edge stuff, I'll be shopping with one eye firmly on the price. I'd actually much rather have a new lens, but gawd this thing takes forever to process RAW pictures, can't cope with 32 car grids in LFS, and laughs at me at 5fps if I go near an airport in FSX with anything more than a control tower and a Cessna parked up.
So bearing that in mind, there's a few things I'm wondering which never seem to be covered in product reviews...
1. I have a Tagan 480W PSU which doesn't have modular cables but is quiet and wasn't cheap when I bought it. Without me checking the ratings for the individual rails printed on the side of the PSU, does anyone know roughly what this can power? Isn't it the 12V rail that's always in increasing demand with each generation of hardware? And what power connectors do gfx cards have these days? And motherboards, for that matter?
2. Speaking of gfx cards, where's the sweet spot (in terms of price/performance) at the moment? Bearing in mind I'm planning on running XP for at least another year, DX10 performance isn't a priority for me right now. I can't decide whether it makes more sense to forget about DX10 now, on the basis that by the time I grudgingly get Vista, the card will be obsolete anyway; or whether I should buy now with the future in mind. Btw I'm an nVidia user, and would prefer to stay with nVidia. Any cards in this sweet spot available with noteably quiet cooling?
3. When are the 45nm processors expected from Intel? Just looking at the prices on Scan, the pre-order price for a 2.66GHz, 6MB cache, 45nm Core 2 Duo E8200 is £115.78. The price of a 2.66GHz, 4MB cache, 65nm Core 2 Duo E6750 is £122.19. So the new 45nm chips are going to be cheaper, and also cooler? And you can get the 3GHz 45nm E8400 for only £14 more than the E8200!
4. Any mobo suggestions? I don't know anything about which ones are highly rated at the moment. I like Asus, I've found them to be ultra-stable and generally well featured. I'm not obsessed with overclocking as I use the computer for work and photography more than gaming these days, and demand perfect stability (although I may be tempted to have a fiddle considering the overclockability of the Core2Duos!). I want plenty ports of all descriptions (although mainly USB and SATA, just need the one PATA connector for optical drives and a floppy port for installing SATA drivers during the XP install process), and things like controlling the cpu fan speed is good. I'll probably get an Antec P182 to put it in, so it'll be staying the right way up, meaning that heatpipe solutions are an option (and certainly preferable to fans on the north/south bridges).
5. Obviously this is determined by the choice of mobo, but in the current market - DDR2 or DDR3?
Phew, that's a lot, I know. Many thanks in advance for any pointers.
Anyways, I'm beginning to think about doing some upgrades to my Athlon-powered pc which is beginning to feel distinctly vintage. I'm not totally decided yet as I really want to save up for a new camera lens like a Sony 70-200 SSM, but think I might benefit more from a short-term upgrade so that I can actually process the pictures I take with any kind of speed.
I used to be fairly up to date with PC hardware, but haven't kept track of it much for the past 18 months. I won't be buying cutting edge stuff, I'll be shopping with one eye firmly on the price. I'd actually much rather have a new lens, but gawd this thing takes forever to process RAW pictures, can't cope with 32 car grids in LFS, and laughs at me at 5fps if I go near an airport in FSX with anything more than a control tower and a Cessna parked up.
So bearing that in mind, there's a few things I'm wondering which never seem to be covered in product reviews...
1. I have a Tagan 480W PSU which doesn't have modular cables but is quiet and wasn't cheap when I bought it. Without me checking the ratings for the individual rails printed on the side of the PSU, does anyone know roughly what this can power? Isn't it the 12V rail that's always in increasing demand with each generation of hardware? And what power connectors do gfx cards have these days? And motherboards, for that matter?
2. Speaking of gfx cards, where's the sweet spot (in terms of price/performance) at the moment? Bearing in mind I'm planning on running XP for at least another year, DX10 performance isn't a priority for me right now. I can't decide whether it makes more sense to forget about DX10 now, on the basis that by the time I grudgingly get Vista, the card will be obsolete anyway; or whether I should buy now with the future in mind. Btw I'm an nVidia user, and would prefer to stay with nVidia. Any cards in this sweet spot available with noteably quiet cooling?
3. When are the 45nm processors expected from Intel? Just looking at the prices on Scan, the pre-order price for a 2.66GHz, 6MB cache, 45nm Core 2 Duo E8200 is £115.78. The price of a 2.66GHz, 4MB cache, 65nm Core 2 Duo E6750 is £122.19. So the new 45nm chips are going to be cheaper, and also cooler? And you can get the 3GHz 45nm E8400 for only £14 more than the E8200!
4. Any mobo suggestions? I don't know anything about which ones are highly rated at the moment. I like Asus, I've found them to be ultra-stable and generally well featured. I'm not obsessed with overclocking as I use the computer for work and photography more than gaming these days, and demand perfect stability (although I may be tempted to have a fiddle considering the overclockability of the Core2Duos!). I want plenty ports of all descriptions (although mainly USB and SATA, just need the one PATA connector for optical drives and a floppy port for installing SATA drivers during the XP install process), and things like controlling the cpu fan speed is good. I'll probably get an Antec P182 to put it in, so it'll be staying the right way up, meaning that heatpipe solutions are an option (and certainly preferable to fans on the north/south bridges).
5. Obviously this is determined by the choice of mobo, but in the current market - DDR2 or DDR3?
Phew, that's a lot, I know. Many thanks in advance for any pointers.