Assembled my new PC
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Just assembled my first PC, i've had a comp as long as i can remember and have tinkered around with the individual parts quite a bit, but this is the firs time i assembled a complete system from scratch, wow what a rush. Spent 2 days going through extremeTech and AnandTech and a bunch of other hardware sites getting up to date on the latest hardware. It took me 3 hrs to assemble the whole thing, pretty long but i was damn careful :) :) The most harrowing part was installing the CPU heat sink and the memory it required a bit more force than i was expecting and i didn't want to break them... Anyways i must say i really enjoyed doing all that, and the first thing i did after setting it up was to post on CP. And next on the list is DOOM III, anyone play it yet? P.S: Here's the config, P4 2.8C, 865G Chipset, 2x256 MB DDR 400 SDRAM, GeForceFx 5600 Ultra, SB Live 5.1, 7200 rpm 80 GB disk. Anyone else got any DIY (Do it yourself) stories?
I always think that the idea of a compiler that compiles another compiler or itself is rather incestuous in a binary way. - Colin Davies My .Net Blog
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Just assembled my first PC, i've had a comp as long as i can remember and have tinkered around with the individual parts quite a bit, but this is the firs time i assembled a complete system from scratch, wow what a rush. Spent 2 days going through extremeTech and AnandTech and a bunch of other hardware sites getting up to date on the latest hardware. It took me 3 hrs to assemble the whole thing, pretty long but i was damn careful :) :) The most harrowing part was installing the CPU heat sink and the memory it required a bit more force than i was expecting and i didn't want to break them... Anyways i must say i really enjoyed doing all that, and the first thing i did after setting it up was to post on CP. And next on the list is DOOM III, anyone play it yet? P.S: Here's the config, P4 2.8C, 865G Chipset, 2x256 MB DDR 400 SDRAM, GeForceFx 5600 Ultra, SB Live 5.1, 7200 rpm 80 GB disk. Anyone else got any DIY (Do it yourself) stories?
I always think that the idea of a compiler that compiles another compiler or itself is rather incestuous in a binary way. - Colin Davies My .Net Blog
I have never actually built a box from the ground up. (never been a need, and I don't know anywhere here until recently that sold parts for a reasonable cost) However I'm looking at building my own portable PC shortly. The main feature I'm planning is to use a data-show projector instead of a common monitor. All the other stuff I wish to use will be standard kit, so upgrading isn't a problem later. (not like laptops) One thing I'm trying to work out is how to include a UPS in the case, plus extra battery life. It's going to probably weigh a bit I guess. :-) Regardz Colin J Davies
*** WARNING *
This could be addictive
**The minion's version of "Catch :bob: "It's a real shame that people as stupid as you can work out how to use a computer. said by Christian Graus in the Soapbox
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Just assembled my first PC, i've had a comp as long as i can remember and have tinkered around with the individual parts quite a bit, but this is the firs time i assembled a complete system from scratch, wow what a rush. Spent 2 days going through extremeTech and AnandTech and a bunch of other hardware sites getting up to date on the latest hardware. It took me 3 hrs to assemble the whole thing, pretty long but i was damn careful :) :) The most harrowing part was installing the CPU heat sink and the memory it required a bit more force than i was expecting and i didn't want to break them... Anyways i must say i really enjoyed doing all that, and the first thing i did after setting it up was to post on CP. And next on the list is DOOM III, anyone play it yet? P.S: Here's the config, P4 2.8C, 865G Chipset, 2x256 MB DDR 400 SDRAM, GeForceFx 5600 Ultra, SB Live 5.1, 7200 rpm 80 GB disk. Anyone else got any DIY (Do it yourself) stories?
I always think that the idea of a compiler that compiles another compiler or itself is rather incestuous in a binary way. - Colin Davies My .Net Blog
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Just assembled my first PC, i've had a comp as long as i can remember and have tinkered around with the individual parts quite a bit, but this is the firs time i assembled a complete system from scratch, wow what a rush. Spent 2 days going through extremeTech and AnandTech and a bunch of other hardware sites getting up to date on the latest hardware. It took me 3 hrs to assemble the whole thing, pretty long but i was damn careful :) :) The most harrowing part was installing the CPU heat sink and the memory it required a bit more force than i was expecting and i didn't want to break them... Anyways i must say i really enjoyed doing all that, and the first thing i did after setting it up was to post on CP. And next on the list is DOOM III, anyone play it yet? P.S: Here's the config, P4 2.8C, 865G Chipset, 2x256 MB DDR 400 SDRAM, GeForceFx 5600 Ultra, SB Live 5.1, 7200 rpm 80 GB disk. Anyone else got any DIY (Do it yourself) stories?
I always think that the idea of a compiler that compiles another compiler or itself is rather incestuous in a binary way. - Colin Davies My .Net Blog
Sijin wrote: Anyone else got any DIY (Do it yourself) stories? I've built 4 PC's from the ground up. (Only 2 of them still work, but it's not because I built the other 2 wrong.)
"Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God." - Jesus
"You must be the change you wish to see in the world." - Mahatma Gandhi -
Just assembled my first PC, i've had a comp as long as i can remember and have tinkered around with the individual parts quite a bit, but this is the firs time i assembled a complete system from scratch, wow what a rush. Spent 2 days going through extremeTech and AnandTech and a bunch of other hardware sites getting up to date on the latest hardware. It took me 3 hrs to assemble the whole thing, pretty long but i was damn careful :) :) The most harrowing part was installing the CPU heat sink and the memory it required a bit more force than i was expecting and i didn't want to break them... Anyways i must say i really enjoyed doing all that, and the first thing i did after setting it up was to post on CP. And next on the list is DOOM III, anyone play it yet? P.S: Here's the config, P4 2.8C, 865G Chipset, 2x256 MB DDR 400 SDRAM, GeForceFx 5600 Ultra, SB Live 5.1, 7200 rpm 80 GB disk. Anyone else got any DIY (Do it yourself) stories?
I always think that the idea of a compiler that compiles another compiler or itself is rather incestuous in a binary way. - Colin Davies My .Net Blog
Sijin wrote: Anyone else got any DIY (Do it yourself) stories? Always have a backup plan. :suss:
David Wulff
"Yeah, ohh, ahh. That's how it always starts. But then later there's running, and screaming." -- Jeff Goldblum, The Lost World.
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Just assembled my first PC, i've had a comp as long as i can remember and have tinkered around with the individual parts quite a bit, but this is the firs time i assembled a complete system from scratch, wow what a rush. Spent 2 days going through extremeTech and AnandTech and a bunch of other hardware sites getting up to date on the latest hardware. It took me 3 hrs to assemble the whole thing, pretty long but i was damn careful :) :) The most harrowing part was installing the CPU heat sink and the memory it required a bit more force than i was expecting and i didn't want to break them... Anyways i must say i really enjoyed doing all that, and the first thing i did after setting it up was to post on CP. And next on the list is DOOM III, anyone play it yet? P.S: Here's the config, P4 2.8C, 865G Chipset, 2x256 MB DDR 400 SDRAM, GeForceFx 5600 Ultra, SB Live 5.1, 7200 rpm 80 GB disk. Anyone else got any DIY (Do it yourself) stories?
I always think that the idea of a compiler that compiles another compiler or itself is rather incestuous in a binary way. - Colin Davies My .Net Blog
I don't think DOOM III is out yet. Unless someone has been doing bad things with USENET ... :~ Building machines can be fun. I haven't bought a complete system in years now.
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Sijin wrote: Anyone else got any DIY (Do it yourself) stories? I've built 4 PC's from the ground up. (Only 2 of them still work, but it's not because I built the other 2 wrong.)
"Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God." - Jesus
"You must be the change you wish to see in the world." - Mahatma Gandhijdunlap wrote: I've built 4 PC's from the ground up I prefer to build em on a table :) Sorry, I couldn't resist. Rob Manderson http://www.mindprobes.net
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Just assembled my first PC, i've had a comp as long as i can remember and have tinkered around with the individual parts quite a bit, but this is the firs time i assembled a complete system from scratch, wow what a rush. Spent 2 days going through extremeTech and AnandTech and a bunch of other hardware sites getting up to date on the latest hardware. It took me 3 hrs to assemble the whole thing, pretty long but i was damn careful :) :) The most harrowing part was installing the CPU heat sink and the memory it required a bit more force than i was expecting and i didn't want to break them... Anyways i must say i really enjoyed doing all that, and the first thing i did after setting it up was to post on CP. And next on the list is DOOM III, anyone play it yet? P.S: Here's the config, P4 2.8C, 865G Chipset, 2x256 MB DDR 400 SDRAM, GeForceFx 5600 Ultra, SB Live 5.1, 7200 rpm 80 GB disk. Anyone else got any DIY (Do it yourself) stories?
I always think that the idea of a compiler that compiles another compiler or itself is rather incestuous in a binary way. - Colin Davies My .Net Blog
When I built my first Athlon based machine (8 months ago) I had to use a frightening amount of pressure to get the heatsink clip on. So much pressure in fact that the clip is never coming off again. Never ever. So more recently I built myself a Dual CPU Athlon system. Same retail boxed CPU kits but the heatsink clips were much easier to install. I was dreading the idea of applying that much force again. Is your P4 a Hyperthreaded one? I'd be interested in knowing how it performs (assuming you've got an NT derived OS or Linux installed). Rob Manderson http://www.mindprobes.net
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Just assembled my first PC, i've had a comp as long as i can remember and have tinkered around with the individual parts quite a bit, but this is the firs time i assembled a complete system from scratch, wow what a rush. Spent 2 days going through extremeTech and AnandTech and a bunch of other hardware sites getting up to date on the latest hardware. It took me 3 hrs to assemble the whole thing, pretty long but i was damn careful :) :) The most harrowing part was installing the CPU heat sink and the memory it required a bit more force than i was expecting and i didn't want to break them... Anyways i must say i really enjoyed doing all that, and the first thing i did after setting it up was to post on CP. And next on the list is DOOM III, anyone play it yet? P.S: Here's the config, P4 2.8C, 865G Chipset, 2x256 MB DDR 400 SDRAM, GeForceFx 5600 Ultra, SB Live 5.1, 7200 rpm 80 GB disk. Anyone else got any DIY (Do it yourself) stories?
I always think that the idea of a compiler that compiles another compiler or itself is rather incestuous in a binary way. - Colin Davies My .Net Blog
Yes, I have built many. The problem with home built computers is that you only get one year of warranty on all parts. If you buy a ready HP computer you will have 3 years of warranty. jhaga --------------------------------- Thus the metric system did not really catch on in the States, unless you count the increasing popularity of the nine-millimeter bullet. -Dave Barry-
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Just assembled my first PC, i've had a comp as long as i can remember and have tinkered around with the individual parts quite a bit, but this is the firs time i assembled a complete system from scratch, wow what a rush. Spent 2 days going through extremeTech and AnandTech and a bunch of other hardware sites getting up to date on the latest hardware. It took me 3 hrs to assemble the whole thing, pretty long but i was damn careful :) :) The most harrowing part was installing the CPU heat sink and the memory it required a bit more force than i was expecting and i didn't want to break them... Anyways i must say i really enjoyed doing all that, and the first thing i did after setting it up was to post on CP. And next on the list is DOOM III, anyone play it yet? P.S: Here's the config, P4 2.8C, 865G Chipset, 2x256 MB DDR 400 SDRAM, GeForceFx 5600 Ultra, SB Live 5.1, 7200 rpm 80 GB disk. Anyone else got any DIY (Do it yourself) stories?
I always think that the idea of a compiler that compiles another compiler or itself is rather incestuous in a binary way. - Colin Davies My .Net Blog
I don't generally buy complete systems, though I usually recommend that my customers do so. It doesn't save any money, but I like selecting the exact hardware I want, plus I can ensure that I have plenty of room for growth. The additional warrantee time a few OEMs are offerring isn't worth the hassle of being limited to what they provide, nor is dealing with their warrantee people a treat. To date, I've had no failed systems, and only one drive that conked out after about five months - just a bad lot from WD, and they replaced it almost overnight.
"Welcome to Arizona!
Drive Nice - We're Armed..."
- Proposed Sign at CA/AZ Border -
I don't think DOOM III is out yet. Unless someone has been doing bad things with USENET ... :~ Building machines can be fun. I haven't bought a complete system in years now.
Andrew McCarter wrote: I don't think DOOM III is out yet. The demo from last years E3 got leaked out because id didn't remove it from the provided computers. Of course I had to download it and see what it was all about...thats all I could do; watch it run at about 0.5 FPS on a Radeon 7500 ;P James "I despise the city and much prefer being where a traffic jam means a line-up at McDonald's" Me when telling a friend why I wouldn't want to live with him
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When I built my first Athlon based machine (8 months ago) I had to use a frightening amount of pressure to get the heatsink clip on. So much pressure in fact that the clip is never coming off again. Never ever. So more recently I built myself a Dual CPU Athlon system. Same retail boxed CPU kits but the heatsink clips were much easier to install. I was dreading the idea of applying that much force again. Is your P4 a Hyperthreaded one? I'd be interested in knowing how it performs (assuming you've got an NT derived OS or Linux installed). Rob Manderson http://www.mindprobes.net
Rob Manderson wrote: I had to use a frightening amount of pressure to get the heatsink clip on. You become fatigued to that after awhile. I did Matt Newman
Sonork: 100:11179 "Jokes should at least try to be intelligent - this is just toilet humor" - Heath Stewart -
Just assembled my first PC, i've had a comp as long as i can remember and have tinkered around with the individual parts quite a bit, but this is the firs time i assembled a complete system from scratch, wow what a rush. Spent 2 days going through extremeTech and AnandTech and a bunch of other hardware sites getting up to date on the latest hardware. It took me 3 hrs to assemble the whole thing, pretty long but i was damn careful :) :) The most harrowing part was installing the CPU heat sink and the memory it required a bit more force than i was expecting and i didn't want to break them... Anyways i must say i really enjoyed doing all that, and the first thing i did after setting it up was to post on CP. And next on the list is DOOM III, anyone play it yet? P.S: Here's the config, P4 2.8C, 865G Chipset, 2x256 MB DDR 400 SDRAM, GeForceFx 5600 Ultra, SB Live 5.1, 7200 rpm 80 GB disk. Anyone else got any DIY (Do it yourself) stories?
I always think that the idea of a compiler that compiles another compiler or itself is rather incestuous in a binary way. - Colin Davies My .Net Blog
The first PC I built was a 486 DX 50. Yes. That was a long time ago. And I managed to break a SIMM (remember those...) in the process. Duh! Since then I have generally bought Dell boxes. However I built a Shuttle PC a couple of months ago. It was SO easy in comparison to the 486 box - only about 30 mins, and with a decent Athlon inside it's stink fast. I can't recommend them enough. Jimbo
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Just assembled my first PC, i've had a comp as long as i can remember and have tinkered around with the individual parts quite a bit, but this is the firs time i assembled a complete system from scratch, wow what a rush. Spent 2 days going through extremeTech and AnandTech and a bunch of other hardware sites getting up to date on the latest hardware. It took me 3 hrs to assemble the whole thing, pretty long but i was damn careful :) :) The most harrowing part was installing the CPU heat sink and the memory it required a bit more force than i was expecting and i didn't want to break them... Anyways i must say i really enjoyed doing all that, and the first thing i did after setting it up was to post on CP. And next on the list is DOOM III, anyone play it yet? P.S: Here's the config, P4 2.8C, 865G Chipset, 2x256 MB DDR 400 SDRAM, GeForceFx 5600 Ultra, SB Live 5.1, 7200 rpm 80 GB disk. Anyone else got any DIY (Do it yourself) stories?
I always think that the idea of a compiler that compiles another compiler or itself is rather incestuous in a binary way. - Colin Davies My .Net Blog
I'm starting my second hand built PC this fall after my first university payment (if theres any money left :) ) I've already built 1 Athlon XP system. Building an AMD box will teach you alot about heat dissipation and airflow. Sijin wrote: The most harrowing part was installing the CPU heat sink and the memory it required a bit more force than i was expecting and i didn't want to break them... Ram has always required more force than I am comfortable with. As for heatsinks I have gotten used to it, but I still practice a lot of caution because one slip-up could cost quite a bit of money. So have you let windows screw it up yet I mean gotten it working :~ :-D Matt Newman
Sonork: 100:11179 "Jokes should at least try to be intelligent - this is just toilet humor" - Heath Stewart -
When I built my first Athlon based machine (8 months ago) I had to use a frightening amount of pressure to get the heatsink clip on. So much pressure in fact that the clip is never coming off again. Never ever. So more recently I built myself a Dual CPU Athlon system. Same retail boxed CPU kits but the heatsink clips were much easier to install. I was dreading the idea of applying that much force again. Is your P4 a Hyperthreaded one? I'd be interested in knowing how it performs (assuming you've got an NT derived OS or Linux installed). Rob Manderson http://www.mindprobes.net
The force thing is something that still scares me. Even plugging in PCI cards etc, seems to require way too much force. Those Pentium 2 boxed CPUs use to scare the hell out of me. I really thought I was going to crack the Mother boards with the force I had to use. I think there is a problem in the specs with allowing this amount of force to be used. Sure good electronic contacts are essential, but there are more practibale ways of designing stuff to pop-clip in. Expense I guess is against this. Regardz Colin J Davies
*** WARNING *
This could be addictive
**The minion's version of "Catch :bob: "It's a real shame that people as stupid as you can work out how to use a computer. said by Christian Graus in the Soapbox
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The force thing is something that still scares me. Even plugging in PCI cards etc, seems to require way too much force. Those Pentium 2 boxed CPUs use to scare the hell out of me. I really thought I was going to crack the Mother boards with the force I had to use. I think there is a problem in the specs with allowing this amount of force to be used. Sure good electronic contacts are essential, but there are more practibale ways of designing stuff to pop-clip in. Expense I guess is against this. Regardz Colin J Davies
*** WARNING *
This could be addictive
**The minion's version of "Catch :bob: "It's a real shame that people as stupid as you can work out how to use a computer. said by Christian Graus in the Soapbox
Those ZIF sockets for the CPU were introduced due to the sheer number of pins on the modern processor. Imagine the nightmare if they'd stuck to the 40 pin DIL style socket for a 478 pin CPU. So the chip itself is easy to install. It's the damn heatsink that's the problem now. I've also heard stories that the thermal pad can adhere so strongly to the CPU that attempting to remove the heatsink wrenches the CPU out of the socket. Ouch!! Rob Manderson http://www.mindprobes.net
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Just assembled my first PC, i've had a comp as long as i can remember and have tinkered around with the individual parts quite a bit, but this is the firs time i assembled a complete system from scratch, wow what a rush. Spent 2 days going through extremeTech and AnandTech and a bunch of other hardware sites getting up to date on the latest hardware. It took me 3 hrs to assemble the whole thing, pretty long but i was damn careful :) :) The most harrowing part was installing the CPU heat sink and the memory it required a bit more force than i was expecting and i didn't want to break them... Anyways i must say i really enjoyed doing all that, and the first thing i did after setting it up was to post on CP. And next on the list is DOOM III, anyone play it yet? P.S: Here's the config, P4 2.8C, 865G Chipset, 2x256 MB DDR 400 SDRAM, GeForceFx 5600 Ultra, SB Live 5.1, 7200 rpm 80 GB disk. Anyone else got any DIY (Do it yourself) stories?
I always think that the idea of a compiler that compiles another compiler or itself is rather incestuous in a binary way. - Colin Davies My .Net Blog
I have built about 30 PCs for myself, my friends and my department at work. For me it takes longer to select the components and purchase them than to put the whole thing together but I am very careful at the selection process for the most part unless I get something cheap off of ebay. I recently picked up a couble of systems (CPU + mobo with audio, video and lan + 512MB memory + case ) for under $200 delivered... John
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Yes, I have built many. The problem with home built computers is that you only get one year of warranty on all parts. If you buy a ready HP computer you will have 3 years of warranty. jhaga --------------------------------- Thus the metric system did not really catch on in the States, unless you count the increasing popularity of the nine-millimeter bullet. -Dave Barry-
This depends on the manufacturer and if you get OEM parts or retail. I have always got a three year warrantee on my stuff... John
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I have built about 30 PCs for myself, my friends and my department at work. For me it takes longer to select the components and purchase them than to put the whole thing together but I am very careful at the selection process for the most part unless I get something cheap off of ebay. I recently picked up a couble of systems (CPU + mobo with audio, video and lan + 512MB memory + case ) for under $200 delivered... John
John M. Drescher wrote: . For me it takes longer to select the components and purchase them than to put the whole thing together but I am very careful at the selection process for the most part unless I get something cheap off of ebay. I recently picked up a couble of systems (CPU + mobo with audio, video and lan + 512MB memory + case ) for under $200 delivered... Same here for all of the above. I don't buy pre-built systems - I like to choose exactly what I put in. But if I do things right, I can build good systems for under $200.
"Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called sons of God." - Jesus
"You must be the change you wish to see in the world." - Mahatma Gandhi -
When I built my first Athlon based machine (8 months ago) I had to use a frightening amount of pressure to get the heatsink clip on. So much pressure in fact that the clip is never coming off again. Never ever. So more recently I built myself a Dual CPU Athlon system. Same retail boxed CPU kits but the heatsink clips were much easier to install. I was dreading the idea of applying that much force again. Is your P4 a Hyperthreaded one? I'd be interested in knowing how it performs (assuming you've got an NT derived OS or Linux installed). Rob Manderson http://www.mindprobes.net
Yes the P4 2.4C is HyperThreaded, to get the real performance boost you have to run the system in dual channel memory configuration, boost is about 33% over single chanel configuration.
I always think that the idea of a compiler that compiles another compiler or itself is rather incestuous in a binary way. - Colin Davies My .Net Blog