Archive for the ‘Gamer’ Category

Building a New Gaming Computer

Tuesday, May 11th, 2010

Lately I’ve been kicking around various thoughts on upgrading my computer, an Intel Core 2 Duo-based system pushing three years old. It began with upgrading my video card from a Geforce 8800GTS to a Radeon HD 4890, but I was met with lackluster performance despite the fact that the new card should smoke the old one. Obviously, I had other limitations, and this simply would not stand.

It took me several more weeks of research, but soon it was decided. I would no longer be upgrading; I would be replacing. The advent of the new Intel LGA 1156 socket meant I would not be simply adding a processor and RAM, but also a new motherboard and a new power supply. When all was said and done, the only part remaining from my old computer was an ASUS DVD burner.

At first, I was planning to use the Core i5-661 for its 3.33 GHz clock speed, but when I realized I could save almost half on the Core i3-530 and only lose 400 MHz, it was a no-brainer. I was fine with the lesser speed, especially with the excellent overclocking capabilities of the Core i3-530.

I felt like I took a bit of a leap with the ASRock motherboard, RAIDMAX power supply, and G.SKILL memory. I had never used any of these brands before, but for the most part, the reviews for all were promising, and RAIDMAX and G.SKILL are rather well-known amongst gamers. (As a side note, customer reviews on practically any computer part will make you nervous.)

Finally, I had the build locked in and I placed the order.

Chassis Cooler Master Centurion 5
Power supply RAIDMAX Blackstone 750W
Motherboard ASRock H55M Pro
CPU Intel Core i3-530 @ 2.93 GHz
RAM G.SKILL Ripjaws DDR3 1600 MHz
Graphics card XFX Radeon HD 4890
Hard drive Western Digital Caviar Black 750 GB

Quick note: Up until the last moment, I had planned to use my old IN-WIN Z611T case for the new build, but ended up deciding to get a new case for better airflow and cooling right before placing the order. Only a day later did I realize I purchased a full size case and a micro ATX motherboard. Oops! Of course the micro ATX board will still work just fine in the full size case, it just feels like a missed opportunity.

The parts all came in one box (except for the case of course.)

Box of Computer Parts Computer Parts Computer Parts

I immediately opened up the Cooler Master Centurion to get to work. The case uses an easy to use screwless design, though the expansion slot snaps are rather flimsy. Optical and disk drives are held secure by sliding plastic clips.

Cooler Master Computer Case

The RAIDMAX power supply is modular, but just like my last experience with a modular PSU, I ended up using all but one of the cables. I do like that it has smaller “tails” protruding from the casing instead of sockets embedded in the side to attach the modular cables, making it easier to manage when already installed in the case.

The large 135mm fan has blue LEDs built into it if you’re into that sort of thing, and I will shamefully admit that the blue glow inside my computer is kind of nifty.

RAIDMAX Power Supply

After getting the power supply and motherboard installed, I had a little laugh at the micro ATX board sitting in that big case, and also encountered a pretty large (though easily worked around) design flaw in the case; the front case fan cable is stupidly short. Stretched to its fullest, it was still a good inch and a half too short to reach the fan header and I was forced to use the included 3-pin fan power to 4-pin Molex power adapter and an entire extra modular power cable.

Short Fan Cable Micro ATX Motherboard

The rest of the build went smoothly, and I was pleasantly surprised by the video card’s clearance. A card of this size will block one of the 3.5″ bays, but there are four more available; more than enough for me.

Computer Build Computer Build

After installing Windows 7 64-bit and getting drivers installed, I, of course, went straight for Crysis, which not only got a poor framerate on my old machine, but even with low graphics settings for higher framerates, it would be frustratingly jittery, presumably due to the dynamic loading of textures and models. None of this was to be seen anymore.

While I didn’t run a proper Crysis benchmark, the first two levels were pretty consistent mid-30s FPS (and no stuttering!) at 1680×1050 resolution, DX10 mode, all settings “very high”, no AA/AF. Perfectly playable.

For a proper benchmark through 3DMark 2006, a comparison between the two machines:

CPU: Intel Core i3-530 @ 2.93 GHz
Motherboard: ASRock H55M Pro
RAM: G.SKILL Ripjaws DDR3 1600 MHz
Video: XFX Radeon HD 4890
3DMark score: 14274

vs.

CPU: Intel Core 2 Duo E6550 @ 2.33 GHz
Motherboard: Intel DG33BU
RAM: Kingston ValueRAM DDR2 667 MHz
Video: Foxconn Geforce 8800GTS 320 MB
3DMark score: 8757

That’s good enough for me!

—CB

Hardware Upgrades – Don’t Forget Your CPU

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

As I’ve mentioned before in passing, my personal computer is fitted with a GeForce 8800GTS video card, a Core 2 Duo E6550 @ 2.33 GHz, and 2 gigs of DDR2 667MHz RAM, and has been for about two and a half years. While the only PC game I’ve been playing a lot lately has been the Starcraft 2 Beta, which is not very hardware intensive, it still bothers me on occasion when some of my other favorites (Team Fortress 2, Left 4 Dead) aren’t comfortably playable at their maximum graphics settings. This fact, combined with a stewing plan to purchase a 24-inch widescreen LCD and the accompanying screen resolution increase, led to my decision to upgrade my video card. Who wants to have to back down graphics settings when you’ve just gotten a large, 1080p monitor?

It took several weeks of hemming, hawing, research, and shopping, but with a budget of $200, give or take, I finally decided that I would make the jump to an XFX Radeon HD 4890. This was an interesting choice for me, as I’ve never owned an XFX product before, and I had also forsaken ATI (or now AMD) video cards a few years ago when I had been forced to replace the stock cooler of a non-overclocked Radeon X700 due to overheating, and it still overheated on occasion. My mind was changed when I looked at the current landscape of the graphics adapter market and found that NVIDIA products are, in general, too expensive for what they offer; benchmarks showed that the Radeon HD 4890 generally outperformed the GeForce GTX260 in roughly the same price point, all the while NVIDIA’s better performers were simply outside my budget.

This is where the mistake was made. I purchased the video card (from Tiger Direct, who got it to me two days after the order was placed, and with free shipping to boot – nice!) and installed it, and soon realized that my CPU is disproportionate! While the framerate boost was noticeable, my aged Core 2 Duo is bottlenecking performance and leaves me only able to bump up some graphics settings in my games – not the kind of performance I could be getting out of this 4890.

Due to Intel’s new sockets for the new Core i3/i5/i7, the LGA 1156 and LGA 1366, I won’t just drop a new processor in my existing motherboard; I’d just be upgrading to an already outdated Core 2 Duo or Core 2 Quad. While I hadn’t been looking originally to begin a new build, this has been what it’s turned into: a new video card turned into a new CPU turned into a new motherboard turned into new RAM and a new power supply! All from wanting to move up to a 24-inch monitor, which is now on the back burner.

What can you learn from this? If your gaming computer is aging and you want to pep it up, don’t just upgrade your video card; your CPU will hold you back. If it’s not in your budget to do what it takes to upgrade both CPU and GPU, wait until it is! You’ll see a bigger performance improvement and be much more satisfied with your upgrade if you do it all at once.

—CB

Building a Gaming Rig – Part 1

Friday, March 27th, 2009

A customer of ours recently approached us about building a really nice gaming computer. Yes, I’m a gamer, and I enjoy building computers. I’m still running a 2.33 GHz Core 2 Duo and a GeForce 8800GTS on my personal computer, and it’s starting to show its age, so how could I pass up this opportunity to build a (hopefully not literally) smoking machine? To drool at Crysis running at “Very High” without breaking a sweat? To think about taking this baby for myself?

The customer had in mind what he wanted from a similar machine he found elsewhere, so we had a bit of a guideline. Possibly the most important factor was the video card, so that’s the first thing we settled on. The BFG Technologies GeForce GTX 280 OC2 (factory overclocked to 650 MHz, with 1 GB of onboard memory) was an obvious choice. What else was obvious? Putting in two of those suckers.

BFG Tech GeForce GTX 280 OC2

Next up, the processor. On our reference sheet, we were looking at an Intel Core 2 Quad overclocked to 3.2 GHz. We didn’t want to fuss with overclocking and potentially destabilizing a customer’s computer, so we selected the Q9650 (3.0 GHz from the factory, with 1333 MHz frontside bus and 12 MB shared L2 cache).

Eight gigs of RAM was also expected. We decided on four two-gigabyte sticks of Kingston HyperX DDR2 at 800 MHz.

But as important as all that is, you’re obviously not going anywhere without a good motherboard. On our reference sheet, we had an MSI P7N SLI-FI. However, this model does not have PCI Express 2.0 slots, and we were not sure about MSI reliability or quality, so that was out. It seemed the Asus P5N-D was the right choice, but as we began assembling the computer, we soon discovered that the second video card blocked the motherboard’s SATA ports.

 Asus P5N-D Motherboard

With a little more research, we came back with an EVGA nForce 750i SLI FTW. An added benefit to this was an extra PCI slot between the PCI Express slots, giving the video cards a little extra breathing room, though this would soon be taken by the sound card. The EVGA board’s SATA ports are at a right angle to the motherboard, giving the video card clearance even when it sits directly over the ports. I still had to swap for the SATA cables included with the Asus motherboard though, since the EVGA SATA cable connectors were too long to fit in our chassis due to the hard drive bay sitting too close.

The customer requested an add-on sound card, and we selected the Asus Xonar D2 PCI sound card. Unfortunately, I couldn’t tell you why, as I didn’t pick it and… let’s just say audio technology is not my field. Unfortunately, I didn’t even take a picture of the thing, but it’s a monster. The color coded LEDs inside the audio jacks are a nice touch.

Speaking of chassis, the chassis was perhaps the most difficult piece to choose. Obviously it needed to be flashy, with good ventilation and cooling, but most importantly it needed to fit those mammoth 10.5″ long video cards. We almost decided on the Antec Nine Hundred, but with many power supplies now having bottom-mounted internal fans and the fact that the Nine Hundred placed the power supply at the bottom of the case, this just didn’t seem like a wise choice.

Then, when we saw the In Win Extreme Series B2 Bomber, we knew.

 In Win B2 Bomber computer case

Its fighter jet/bomber styling (including electric front hatch) and the B2 bomber shaped side vent almost seemed tacky to my conservative sensibilities (I consider case windows “over the top”, so you can see where I’m coming from), but ultimately it was just too cool to pass up. Though the front panel may look a little closed in, there still seems to be plenty of ventilation.

Of course, we also needed a power supply that could push all this. For two GTX280 cards, we wanted at least 850 watts, and with the quality of In Win’s 350 watt units we’ve been using in the shop, we selected In Win’s SLI-certified Commander 850W.

In Win Commander 850W

The modular cables are a nice touch, though I only omitted one or two thanks to the graphics cards alone requiring four cables. I was pretty impressed with this unit, which could pretty much be used for anything. Aside from the cables being detachable from the power supply, the connectors are also modular, such as the 2×2 processor power connector having another clip-on 2×2 connector in case you need a 2×4 connector. Also, as with many power supplies now, the motherboard power is easily changeable between 2×20 and 2×22, and even the PCI-E power cables can be used for 2×3 or 2×4 by simply clipping on or removing the extra pins.

With all this excitement, it’s easy to forget a hard drive. The original request was a 1 TB drive, but considering the current reliability issues 1 TB drives seem to be having, we backed it off to a 750 GB SATA Western Digital Caviar Black, and to top it all off, an LG Blu-Ray/DVD/CD burner plus HD-DVD reader with LightScribe. With the cost of one of these things, you almost wonder why you’d buy a dedicated Blu-Ray player.

Alright! So we’ve got our parts. Tune in next time and we’ll build this monster!

—CB