Alan G
05-04-2013, 10:12 AM
First of all, thank you for a great resource and parts recommendations. Building a PC is pretty close to child's play (maybe it should be 'adult child'). Everything went smoothly and the system booted up the first time I hit the start button. I needed a new computer to replace my old noisy one which needed some case fan replacement for sure and the video card was having intermittent issues that were not attributable to the driver. I don't play games, so overclocking and absolute speed are not an issue for me. Most of my photo editing is done in Adobe Lightroom and I only use Photshop for final editing as needed. I seldom do panoramas which are more processor intensive. For those reasons I opted for an Intel Ivy Bridge i5 rather than an i7. I wanted fast boot up and program loading so I installed an SSD for that purpose. I also wanted a case that was quiet and had enough expansion capabilities for more hard drives as needed (though if one is keeping photo files in Lightroom with xmp instructions the file size is much smaller than TIF files).
My hardware selections were:
Case - Fractal Designes Arc Midi R2 (it has 3 fans a fan controler and lots of room for wires and a CPU cooler, it also has a removable 5 bay internal drive which I took out as I don't need it at present)
CPU - i5 Ivy Bridge 3470
Motherboard - Ausus P8Z77-V LGA
CPU Cooler - Enermax ETS T40 (really easy to install and is quiet)
Video Card - MSI GeForce GTX 660 (I'm stcking with NVIDIA chips because of my bad experience with ATI)
SSD - Samsung 840 128GB (just after I did my build Amazon had the 256GB Samsung 840 for less than I paid for 128!)
HD - Western Digital Caviar Black 2TB (my case has room for 5 more drives if I ever need them)
Memory - 4x4GB Crucial DDR3 PC3-12800
PS - SeaSonic X650 Gold (get a modular power supply so you don't end up with wires you are not using in your build)
Optical Drive - ASUS DVD/CD RW (I don't watch Blue Ray movies on my computer so I don't need that feature)
This system sits on my desk top about 18 inches away and one can just hear the case fans at the middle speed. It also has support for USB 3 on the mother board which is nice as well.
One interesting issue that surfaced during software installation was with the optical drive cranking incessantly when trying to load some of my older programs that were still on CDs. I use Bitdefender as my anti-virus program and the default setting is to scan all drives (CD/DVD, USB, SSD, HD). If you have 'trusted' discs you should uncheck the scan option for your optical drive. I originally thought that my optical drive was damaged when I tried installing the first program until I figured this out. I know that other security programs such as Microsoft Security Essentials do not do this.
I now have a system that should serve me well and if there are issues I can diagnose them and do the repairs (if needed) myself. My new video card works great and the first set of test images that I processed showed that this is a great set up for photo editing. For those who do video editing, maybe an i7 CPU is needed and of course much more storage space would be required. The Fractal Case has plenty of room and my system runs quiet and cool. If I do need to upgrade the SSD, it's easy enough to do as I only have the OS and the few programs that I use on it. I put a 128GB SSD in because is was slightly cheaper and even after installing everything it's only at 60% of capacity so I'm OK in that regard. I likely will add a 256GB SSD when the prices drop and mirror the OS and program installation.
Final cost of the build: $1400 Installation labor: 6 hours including OS installation
My hardware selections were:
Case - Fractal Designes Arc Midi R2 (it has 3 fans a fan controler and lots of room for wires and a CPU cooler, it also has a removable 5 bay internal drive which I took out as I don't need it at present)
CPU - i5 Ivy Bridge 3470
Motherboard - Ausus P8Z77-V LGA
CPU Cooler - Enermax ETS T40 (really easy to install and is quiet)
Video Card - MSI GeForce GTX 660 (I'm stcking with NVIDIA chips because of my bad experience with ATI)
SSD - Samsung 840 128GB (just after I did my build Amazon had the 256GB Samsung 840 for less than I paid for 128!)
HD - Western Digital Caviar Black 2TB (my case has room for 5 more drives if I ever need them)
Memory - 4x4GB Crucial DDR3 PC3-12800
PS - SeaSonic X650 Gold (get a modular power supply so you don't end up with wires you are not using in your build)
Optical Drive - ASUS DVD/CD RW (I don't watch Blue Ray movies on my computer so I don't need that feature)
This system sits on my desk top about 18 inches away and one can just hear the case fans at the middle speed. It also has support for USB 3 on the mother board which is nice as well.
One interesting issue that surfaced during software installation was with the optical drive cranking incessantly when trying to load some of my older programs that were still on CDs. I use Bitdefender as my anti-virus program and the default setting is to scan all drives (CD/DVD, USB, SSD, HD). If you have 'trusted' discs you should uncheck the scan option for your optical drive. I originally thought that my optical drive was damaged when I tried installing the first program until I figured this out. I know that other security programs such as Microsoft Security Essentials do not do this.
I now have a system that should serve me well and if there are issues I can diagnose them and do the repairs (if needed) myself. My new video card works great and the first set of test images that I processed showed that this is a great set up for photo editing. For those who do video editing, maybe an i7 CPU is needed and of course much more storage space would be required. The Fractal Case has plenty of room and my system runs quiet and cool. If I do need to upgrade the SSD, it's easy enough to do as I only have the OS and the few programs that I use on it. I put a 128GB SSD in because is was slightly cheaper and even after installing everything it's only at 60% of capacity so I'm OK in that regard. I likely will add a 256GB SSD when the prices drop and mirror the OS and program installation.
Final cost of the build: $1400 Installation labor: 6 hours including OS installation