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The $600 random winter holiday PC

After surviving the dog days of summer and doing its part for Yuletide cheer, Icrontic’s $600 PC is back and better than ever. It’s late winter now, and any one of the random, forgettable holidays that pepper this time of the year are a perfect excuse to upgrade.  We know that AMD and Intel have hot new chips, but we reckon that a $600 rig that makes virtually anything its bitch might be a little hard to overlook. Do we have your attention yet?

Icrontic swears to do right by you, and we promise that this system isn’t a flaming hunk of fail. Every component has been meticulously handpicked to deliver Crysis-level performance without sending you running for a bailout loan. If $600 is too wimpy for your checkbook, our alternate suggestions bring the system closer to the $1000 pricepoint.

It is important to note: We, like all good geeks, do away with concerning ourselves with shipping on these prices. Also, you’ll have to supply your own operating system. We use the Icrontic Marketplace comparison shopping engine for many of these components. Most of these prices vary within $1-$2 depending on the day you check.  With that said:

Motherboard – DFI BloodIron P35-T2RL

Why it’s good: Despite even more recent chipsets, the P35 is a time-tested powerhouse of overclocking prowess. Couple this mastery with a no-frills/all-thrills board like the ascetic BloodIron and you’ll have an overclocking festival reminiscent of ABIT’s beloved NF7-S 2.0. Of course, this may have something to do with DFI sniping the NF7-S 2.0’s lead engineer a few years back. You’ll love this motherboard because it stands head and shoulders above anything else in its price range.

How you can do better: This board has a lot to offer an overclocker, but it isn’t all that and a bag of donuts. If you’re looking for more advanced features like solid caps, 8-phase power, and an abundance of extras, you should turn elsewhere. We’ve heard that the DFI LanParty DK P45-T3RS is a beastly step up. Not sold on DDR3? Aww, okay…. The DFI LanParty DK P45-T2RS is pretty swank too.

Processor – Intel Core 2 Duo E7300

Why it’s good: The Core 2 Duo represents Intel’s escape from unspeakable levels of bad. Since its 2006 introduction, Intel has held the crown for speed, heat, and efficiency. Not content with standing still, Intel continued to step up their game with the release of the 45nm Wolfdale architecture. Given that Wolfdale chips run faster and colder than their predecessors, it seemed like a no-brainer to cram one into this rig.

How you can do better: Your only way up is to add more speed (a faster Core 2 Duo) or more cores (Core 2 Quad). If you’re jonesing for a quad, the Yorkfield-based Q9300 is a real looker that adds about $120 to your bill.

Memory – OCZ PC2-8500

Why it’s good: Four gigabytes. 1066. Lifetime warranty. Discuss.

How you can do better: You’ll need DDR3 if that DFI P45-T3RS has wooed you: Four gigs of DDR3-12800! Accept nothing less.

Video – NVIDIA GeForce 9800 GT

Why it’s good: The NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GT was a marvel. It was cheap, it was fast, and it was quiet… The Egg no longer carries it. Rather than drowning ourselves in a flood of anguished tears, we scrounged up the 9800 GT. This newer GPU isn’t any faster than our beloved 8800 GT, but it does run colder, and that’s good enough for us.

How you can do better: From here, you’re on the road to a better video card. Today’s GPUs are more inexpensive than ever and have cultivated a gluttony of fast and cheap video cards. Luminaries like GeForce 9800 GTX+, Radeon 4850, and GeForce 260 put more at our fingertips with more in our wallets than ever before.

Power Supply – Corsair CMPSU-450VX

Why it’s good: The VX-series of power supplies is getting rave reviews all over the web for the quality of its power output and the quality of its construction. While 450w doesn’t seem like much with today’s 1kW monsters, be assured that it’s more than enough to power our rig with juice to spare.

How you can do better: This depends on your fancy and aspirations. If you’re a fan of modular cables, there are greener pastures to be had on this front. If you’re a soul looking for an overclocked quad with titanic disk space and an array of video cards that could re-render Jar-Jar out of Star Wars, you might want a bigger power supply. Corsair’s VX line of power supplies entertains a respectable pricepoint without sucking a whole bunch.

Hard Drive – Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 ST3808

Why it’s good: Seagate is a respected brand and the Barracuda is a respected product line. This hard drive won’t win any races to the finish line, but it won’t hurtle towards the checkered flag a miserable wreck of bits and bytes either. In fact, we chose the drive for its cost to size ratio and its long-standing reliability. Sometimes it pays to respect ol’ faithful.

How you can do better: While we’re not going to scoff at 250GB, we prefer something slightly larger like, oh, 1500GB. Price scales with capacity, so be prepared shell out the dough for a bigger drive. Particularly speed-addicted individuals will enjoy Western Digital’s Raptor 10K series, but ownership commands a price that will hit your wallet like the fist of an angry god. You know, relatively speaking.

Optical – Optiarc AD-7220A

Why it’s good: The optical writer market has become so homogeneous that it’s become a great mass of black-bezeled beauties that all service the same way. Coasters? Bum drives? Forget about it. Optiarc is a decent OEM company that makes decent products. A burner is a burner these days, and we picked the first one from a brand that didn’t suck.

How you can do better: Blu-Ray? Ack. Thbbpt!

Case – Antec 300

Why it’s good: Once upon a time, there was a swank case known as the Antec 900. Receiving rave reviews all over the internet for her knockout combination of beauty and prowess, she was the toast of the town. But she was too expensive for our low-town box… So we hooked it up with her little sister. Zing! The Antec 300 packs all the punch of the big sibling at half the price. I shouldn’t even have to explain how sweet the 300 is.

How you can do better: Bigger? Bigger’s better, right? The Antec 900 can spice up your nights. Don’t ask us about other cases.

Aftermath

The total for this little beauty clocks in at a svelte $588.18. If you fudge the cost of shipping like all good enthusiasts do, we’ve left you enough money to go nuts with about four liters of Mountain Dew.

Part Price
DFI BloodIron $109.99
Intel Core 2 Duo E7300 $119.99
OCZ PC2-8500 (2×2GB) $44.99
NVIDIA GeForce 9800GT
$119.99
Corsair CMPSU-450VX $72.24
Seagate Barracuda 7200.10 $51.04
Optiarc AD-7220A $19.99
Antec 300
$49.95
Total: $588.18
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7 Comments:

  1. Komete
    DIY Haxx0r

    I read this at work earlier. That was an awsome writeup.

    "We know that AMD and Intel have hot new chips, but we reckon that a $600 rig that makes virtually anything its bitch might be a little hard to overlook. Do we have your attention yet?"

    When I read that I said yep and read on.lol GJ

  2. RyderOCZ
    OCZ Guru / IC Groupie

    This thing just gets better and better as prices come down. So easy to build a stout PC now days.

  3. AlexDeGruven
    I am Geek. Hear me... type?

    I love the E Series C2D chips. For the price, they give an awful lot of grunt, and they're very overclockable, from what I've read. I have a 7200 still running stock, and I haven't yet even felt the need to push it. Though, a coworker has one of these and ran it solidly at 3.2GHz on STOCK cooling, bumping it up to 3.6 with a Zalman something-or-other-that-I-can't-remember.

    It's amazing how far down RAM prices have come just in the last few months. When I did my last upgrade in October, I spent about $95 for my 8GB of DDR2-800. Now, I could pick that up for around $50.

  4. DrLiam
    FoxtoN

    But what about Canadian Dollars? :P

    The $800 random winter holiday PC!

  5. benjamint
    Getting settled in

    for someone who doesn't know alot about computers... would this be easy to put together?

  6. That really, really depends on your definition of "doesn't know a lot." If you're pretty capable with a screwdriver and are willing to ask some questions on a forum, we can teach anyone how to put a PC together without issue. If you don't know the difference between a power supply or a processor (I met someone like this yesterday who was trying to build a PC), you might be in for a spit of trouble.

    If you had to genuinely rate your familiarity and/or expertise with a computer's innards, on a scale of 1-10, what would you say?

  7. Sonorous
    Icrontic Duke of Haxor

    I am a 1. It's cake. I have helped several friends build rigs with limited knowledge of hardware. You just have to keep your cool when you do it, and think every step through on your first couple builds. Then it's second nature after a while. I should make a poll and see who can plug sata/ide in with out looking at it.

Hey, be nice. Icrontic is full of good people, we promise.

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