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Thread: Diy Pc.....

  1. #1

    Default Diy Pc.....

    I was wondering if you would be able to help me. I do not know what to check in choosing compatible components for my new computer system. Do you know what to look for in making sure it all works together??

    Will

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Nov 2003
    Location
    Upper Gills, Caithness
    Posts
    82

    Default Diy

    with modern computers it's mostly plug & play but if you say what computer you have & the spec i'm sure the techies will be able to help you a lot further.

    jacquie
    Perserverence is the Key
    Searching Hazel,Campbell,Sutherland,Bremner,Calder,Gunn.
    Jacquie

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Posts
    1,460

    Default

    If you are building a new system I would put the parts together in the following order:

    CPU
    pick your processor and find out what socket it requires on the motherboard.

    Motherboard
    Choose one that has the correct socket for the CPU along with any other features you would like, onboard sound, SLI, LAN etc

    Memory
    Get memory that fits the motherboard

    GFX Card
    Again one that fits into the slot on the motherboard. If you are looking to get a particular card check it for being either AGP or PCIe and you should be able to find a motherboard with the correct combination to match up with your CPU

    Sound cards will fit anything if you dont get it onboard will all be PCI

    All Hard Drives should be supported by modern motherboards as should CD/DVD drives although you should check which the motherboard supports SATA or IDE (or both)

    Keyboard/mouse/monitor should all be compatible no matter what you get.

    its worth noting that pretty much any power supply that you get free with a case will be rubbish so expect to pay around 50-70 quid for a decent one it can save you all kinds of issues later as I have discovered to my own cost

  4. #4

    Default power supply

    Thanks very much, Im on my way to building by new computer to support Vista, which, in the long run will hopefully control the lighting in my flat, (I like that kind of thing.....lol) and will be running principally on Windows media centre. So, getting all the parts to operate together in the first place will be fairl handy lol, just been getting a bit confused when looking at aria.co.uk! Im getting fairly excited - looking forward to what the new system will be like!!

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Dec 2002
    Location
    Kuwait & Iraq
    Posts
    48

    Default

    Just finished putting together my first PC last night. I'm a mechanical engineer, so dont normally do the 'wiggly amps' stuff. Got top spec bits and a case with blue neon flashy bits! Very gingerly hit the 'On' button and it whirred in to life....magic feeling!
    Got a step-by-step guide from a PC building article in PC Gamer magazine from a few months ago. Had some very useful tips.
    Good luck!

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Dec 2002
    Location
    Kuwait & Iraq
    Posts
    48

    Default

    By the way, the bits i put in are :

    Thermaltake Shark case
    Enermax Noisetaker II 600W power supply (See Niall's comment)
    AMD Athlon 64 x2 dual core processor
    Asus A8N SLI Motherboard
    Kingston 1 Gb RAM
    GeForce 9500 GT video card
    Plextor DVD & CD read/writer
    Matsumi floppy & media reader drive

    Didnt bother with a sound card as the m/board has good onboard audio (can always add later), and dropped in a temperature monitor & fan control display on the front, and a modem card in the back from my previous PC.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Location
    Thurso
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    4,705

    Default

    Well done PhilR - having built many PCs from scratch I still get that 'will it work first time' buzz when I push the On button!

    My latest custom build was a dual-core P4 on a top-spec Asus mobo with 2Gb RAM, a pair of 160Gb RAID 0 SATA drives and a cracking 512Mb PCIe graphics card - all of which was built in a very nice Thermaltake case complete with more fans (11 in total *) and lights than you could shake a stick at. It went like stink but unfortunately it wasn't for me but for a gamer who's retired and has plenty of budget to throw at it.

    * For those of you wondering where 11 fans could go, here goes:-

    PSU Fan x2
    CPU Fan x1
    Mobo Chipset Fan x1
    Graphics Card Fan x1
    Case Fan x2
    Hard Drive Cooler Fan x2
    PCI Slot Exhaust Fan x2

    Overkill? Maybe, but Hey the customer is always right!!!



  8. #8
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    Wick
    Posts
    1,020

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by willz320 View Post
    Thanks very much, Im on my way to building by new computer to support Vista, which, in the long run will hopefully control the lighting in my flat, (I like that kind of thing.....lol) and will be running principally on Windows media centre. So, getting all the parts to operate together in the first place will be fairl handy lol, just been getting a bit confused when looking at aria.co.uk! Im getting fairly excited - looking forward to what the new system will be like!!
    The only thing I'd add to what Niall said (and what he didn't know when he wrote that post) is make sur eyou get the right hardware to support Media Centre. By that I mean the right vide card mainly as you can get Media Centre branded stuff (which usually costs extra) that will operate out of the box with it.

    Having said that you've now built it so I thought I'd add it for others to see.
    Kind regards,

    Paul Broadwith
    Blue Ivy Ltd, Wick - Certified Microsoft Small Business Specialist

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