anomalousdecay
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$3000 is overboard.
Some things people neglect that you shouldn't because I'm here to tell you about them:
-Casing choice is important. Choose one based on air ventilation if you are looking for a lifespan of ~10 years
-Cross check that all parts are compatible eg some components require a specific motherboard type (use manufacturers website for this..)
-Cross check that your PSU can handle the energy requirements, particularly for graphics cards which require boat loads
-When choosing RAM, don't simply opt in for the latest 32GB if you know you'll never use that. More components = more heat = shorter life span
-INVEST IN SURGE PROTECTION
-When choosing your CPU, it's not the GHz that matter, its the relative benchmark https://www.cpubenchmark.net/. Same thing with graphics card, too
-Some hardware combinations offer performance boosts specific to manufacturers (not really relevant, but worth nothing)
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apologies in advance if you know any of these, or if you have taken them into account already.
With cases, I've set a limit of 500 mm (height) x 260 mm (width) x 500 mm (depth). In terms of the ventilation, it's good from the front only. Rest is kinda blocked off because of the position it is in. The less the height and width, the better the ventilation across the sides. The back is pretty much blocked off from any sort of ventilation.
I will most likely be doing cross checking once I have a feel for the parts and feel a bit more comfortable with understanding how everything will be set. Most likely will be done once I can affirm a spec.
PSU seems to be completely fine with what I'm running at the moment from the site. Will double check later on with the spec of individual components and do a manual check.
Nah RAM will be a progressive thing. 16 GB is good enough for me at the moment.
Surge protection is the big issue currently. Need to look more into that.
I pretty much thought of the i7-4790k because it has good performance and isn't too pricey. Any better suggestions than this?
The hardware combinations offering performance boosts was one other reason why I did originally consider factory models rather than custom build. However I'm not really sure to the extent of how much this compares to just building your own PC.
All good. I was aware of a few of them but being new to this I prefer any comments to remind me or keep me up to date with it all.
Yeah the full modular's are a bit more to pay for (about $50 or so). Will consider it though. The only issue I can figure regarding full modular's was when I was reading up that they can add to resistance with the plastic and especially when dust goes inside. However I don't think that will be a big issue here.Semi-modular is alright as long as you have good cable management. I went with a full modular psu just for convenience and if I had to change a wire for whatever reason, I wouldn't need to worry about which one. 650W is plenty. One issue I had when building my PC was my 20+4 pin ATX main power cable was cut incorrectly so the latch didn't click onto my mobo. I kind of forced it on instead of exchanging it...so this a reason for full modular - I would not need to remove my entire psu and all its existing connections in order to replace one cable.
Consider getting extra fans for general air flow throughout the case (this is case dependent). If overclocking is a potential future decision, then make sure your components can handle an increase in GHz.
CAD + Chrome is nothing with those specs. I can easily run it with Intel Core i7-4770K, 16GB ram and GTX 760 graphics. Go with 2 8GB ram sticks and so you should have 2 extra slots for later on if you need it. I can easily run CS:GO on high graphics and around 300 fps. Although admittedly, my graphics card fan does make a fair bit of noise (not quite sure what to do).
Also, I haven't checked yet but see if your mobo has on board wifi and/or an ethernet output. You probably won't need an additional one straight up.
I was thinking of using the external and internal bays as a place to add more fans to the rig. Is this possible?
That seems alright then. Given that, then the specs should be fine for future CAD or moderate end gaming for the next few years.
Checking that up.
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Thanks everyone for the advice so far. Will be looking into updating a few things into a more revised rig in the next week or so and will have a look at reviewing it like this again soon. Let me know on anything else that might help.