Hi,
I'm the latest in a line of members looking to replace/upgrade their PC.
My 6 year old PC is an Acer i5-650 at 3.2GHz, 6GB RAM with NVIDIA GeForce GT320 graphics, it has compatibility/driver issues, which kinda puts me off Acer and NVIDIA. I also prefer to avoid Seagate as a HDD brand, but I like WD.
I set myself a mental budget of £1000, but what I'm working up to is coming out at £1500+, so I'm looking to trim a bit if possible, justifying that much on a PC when effectively retired might harm my health! I might even be forced to get a job
Apologies for the long post!
I have done my research of posts by the others who've been this route this year - and come up with a spec. I am looking for. It's not dissimilar to Richard's.
Processor: Intel i5-6600 or i7-6700, possibly with a K suffix denoting the ability to 'overclock' it, although I don't intend to. It'll likely be in the range 3.5 - 4 GHz.
Q1: Is it worth the extra for the i7? (for PS and LR) SkyLake?
RAM: 16 GB, or 32 GB ideally, DDR4 at 2133 or faster
Q2: Any brands to look for or avoid?
Tower case: sitting on desk behind monitor for ease of access, so not too noisy.
I like having a built in card reader for downloading images, so I'll hope to have one of those, ideally a USB 3 speed one.
Plenty of USB 3 and USB 2 ports, front and rear.
I have 4 front and 4 rear at the moment (all USB 2 I think) and split one of those in the monitor with dongles for wireless mice(s) and keyboard, plus wired Wacom tablet.
Motherboard: 'Intel' Z170? not sure on manufacturer Asus or Gigabyte, or suffix - I don't need 3D gaming, just start and run LR and PS quicker than now, plus all the usual other things; web, office docs, use of dual tuner DVB-T/T2 TV stick, etc.
Q3: Can I save by downgrading Motherboard? (w/o losing too much)
Drives:
240 - 256 GB SSD for Windows 10 (Home or Pro?), plus things that benefit from fast access; PS, LR and their files
Q4: Is m.2 worth the extra over SATA (if motherboard supports m.2 SSD?)
1 or 2 TB 7200rpm HDD (or pair in RAID1) for other programs, documents, recorded TV programs, etc.
Prefer WD, but if Seagate, 2 in RAID1 array gives some safety against a failure, I guess.
All my image files are currently on external HDD, so they'll just reconnect via USB
Graphics: separate card and here's where I struggle to understand things most, while I want one with a decent memory; 2 GB or more, I am concerned it won't be able to connect to my monitor(s) if I go too high spec. also cost goes crazy.
Some of the cards I have been looking at say they don't support multiple monitors, but I think the on-board graphics of the motherboard does (it certainly has a wide variety of connectors).
NVIDIA seem to be king - their chipset in 80% or more of cards, regardless of manufacturer (ASUS, MSI, GigaByte).
Q5: Can I mix and match monitor connections? e.g. use the separate graphics card for main monitor and on-board graphics for the AOC?
Q6: Also not sure of benefit of Graphics memory and processor to LR or PS, any advice?
To save money, I wasn't intending to buy a new monitor now, just use the 23" Viewsonic VP2365wb (1920 x 1080) plus a little 18.5" AOC 936W as a second monitor (runs at 1366 x 768), these connect via DVI-D and VGA respectively.
If I have to get one - desk width is an issue, the most I could fit would be another 22" or 23" if I had to (i.e. get one with a DisplayPort or HDMI?)
Although, another thought is to turn one sideways, have it permanently portrait orientation, would this work, I assume Win 10 could cope? Anyone else do this?
Optical Drive: either 24x DVD Writer or BluRay - I'm not fussed, it rarely gets used.
Audio: I will use whatever is on motherboard, I don't need much to listen to iTunes or TV on a pair of speakers plus sub-woofer
Not looking for 5.1 or 7.1 and buying more speakers.
UK Supplier:
I'd rather buy a working system with Windows 10 installed, than buy components and risk getting something with hidden compatibility issues.
Currently considering:
Novatech, but Seagate HDD only
Chillblast
QuietPC?
Q7: Any others known with good reputations?
I have a feeling there are some inherent limitations in processor, motherboard, RAM capacity choices.
Q8: How easy is it to administer program/app installs on Win 10 so the ones I need on SSD are put there and the rest aren't, but that their scratchpad workspace is on SSD when necessary?
Thanks in advance for any questions answered, Dave
confuddled and befused