Quitch wrote:
As long as you're happy with the card, that's all that matters, but there were better deals out there, and the extra memory is a waste of money.
I agree with you on this point. I have done the research as you suggested and I surrender that ATI Radeon 9800 Pro 128 is a very good card. But I can also see the monetary point of view too. At the time when I built my PC, I had a budget of 456.00 that I could use toward the project.
I chose to go with an 11 bay Alluminum case, a 520w PS, and front audio/usb/firewire ports for ease of use with my camcorder and digital camera.
Next I needed a MB that would have minimum 3200 DDR slots and could handle upto a 3G processor as well as not having shared memory or onboard video. It also needed 4 to 5 PCI slots for other addons.
I then chose a CPU that if needed, could be OC significantly while retaining stability. At the time the AMD Athlon XP was most reputable for OC if or when I needed to add performance.
For Ram, I couldn't afford brand new Corsairs, so I settled for a used 512mb 3200 ddr corsair stick.
Next I needed Storage capacity as my older systems had always lacked that, so I went with 2 UATA 133mhz 120GB 7200rpm w/ 8M cache HDDs.
Lastly, I went with the nvidia based display card w/ 256 MB ram and multiple I/O jacks for video capturing/ tv tuning/ editing etc. and for future OC adjustments if needed. (for what I do including gaming, I don't need the 3.04Gpixel/sec FPS rate).
The final part of the budget went for a CDR, DVD-rom, Cooling and a .22dp 17" Monitor.
All in all, I ended up with a system that competes on a level that equals the P4 2.8GHz stock system (read as Dell/HP/Gateway/Etc.) and I haven't even played with OC yet. For my needs, this system should be able to handle most anything I need for many years to come yet, and I did it with $460.00 (yes I went over by $4.00) and a lot of part searching
