$220 Budget Computer for Parents

rebelx

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Mar 18, 2012
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UPDATE: All the components are finished except I'm still iffy about the RAM (is it the best I can do for $20) and I need a case (also in the $20-25 range). Thoughts on those two components?

Approximate Purchase Date: Build will occur in mid May, but I'm buying components as I see them

Budget Range: $220 max

System Usage from Most to Least Important: Surfing the internet, YouTube

Parts Not Required: video card, keyboard, mouse, monitor, speakers, OS

Preferred Website(s) for Parts: frys.com (including B&M), microcenter (B&M), amazon.com, newegg.com

Country: CA, USA

Parts Preferences: No OCZ, ECS, or Biostar

Overclocking: No

SLI or Crossfire: No

Monitor Resolution: 1920x1080

Additional Comments:

Processor: Intel i3-2100 ($94.99)
http://www.microcenter.com/single_product_results.phtml?product_id=0359809

Motherboard: H61M-P23 (B3) LGA 1155 H61 mATX Intel Motherboard ($19.99 combo discount)
http://www.microcenter.com/single_product_results.phtml?product_id=0359807

Hard Drive: OCZ SATA III 60GB ($35 AR)
(Link is for reference) http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820227725

Video Card: Asus 5450 512mb ($10.68 AR)
http://www.amazon.com/SILENT-Series-Guard-Profile-Design/dp/B00612YORQ/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1333409387&sr=8-2

RAM: G.SKILL Ripjaws Series 4GB 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 1066 (PC3 8500) Desktop Memory Model F3-8500CL7S-4GBRL ($19.99) - Is this good? Only 1066 but the other voltages and stuff have low numbers, so that's a good thing?
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820231307&SortField=0&SummaryType=0&PageSize=10&SelectedRating=-1&VideoOnlyMark=False&IsFeedbackTab=true#scrollFullInfo

Case: $15-25 range

PSU: Corsair 430W ($19.99 AR)

OS: Windows 7 (purchased $10)

Optical Drive: None, or if possible reuse the old one (No idea on specs, brand, etc). $0.00

I'm currently at around $200 (factoring in the fact that I won't pay more than $20 for 4GB of RAM).
 


This is intriguing. Is this something I would also find at Microcenter (not sure who else does combo discounts)?
 


You're right, I once picked up a 500GB Samsung Spinpoint a couple years ago for about $40 (new)! If I increase the value to $50, would that help you perhaps pick out a good model? I really don't need "space," just enough for the basic programs + their updates.
 


Thanks for the idea. I had forgotten that I saw Lenovo's outlet which had pretty decently spec'd refurbished (1 year warranty) desktops (G620 processor, 4 GB ram, 500gb hard drive)for $186 about a couple weeks ago. I should've bought one when I had the chance, but it gave me an idea to do this project instead.

I would also be amenable to dropping the processor to a G620, if I could find a board that would go along with it at a cheaper price.

I'm also not adverse to the AMD/APU idea either, but again, cost is the mitigating factor.
 


With the recent Thailand flooding, hdd's have gone through the roof, to the point where they are 2x the price they used to be.
For most budget minded people, buying a prebuilt computer usually makes mor sense on the lower end if a good sale comes around.
This is a pretty good site for tech sales and other things.
http://slickdeals.net/
 


Microcenter has deals like this as well.
 


I'll check out the couple that are left in my area, but I don't think I've seen computers in my location though.



I read about the flooding, but I was hoping it wouldn't affect the US market as heavily at it has. Do you think a 32GB is enough for to handle Windows/Antivirus + updates? Is there a significant drop in performance for an SSD if it is nearly filled?

I'm a regular on SD :)



I'll go look at their ad again for the month and see if I perhaps missed it. I know they're running the i5, i3, and fx4100/6100 combo deals right now.
 
you can save money by going ith a sandy bridge celeron instead of the pentiums, 55$ instead of 80, i know they used to be crap but really the sandy bridge ones dont apear to be bad at all, some people game on the dual core models. and if they have an old computer, why not re use the old hard drive? ide/sata adapters arent very expencive if one is needed. then they will also have any other files they want to keep.
 


There are all kinds of combos ... even some your wife might approve :lol:

MicroCenter calls them 'Bundles' -- NewEgg has combo offers at the bottom of the item pages and a separate searchable combo deal database

The AMD ITX Zacate APUs are CPU/GPU cores soldered onto the motherboard. It's really hard for someone to align 600 pins to a motherboard socket the size of your fingernail 😀 I've got a ASRock E350M1/USB3 AMD E-350 APU with a 64GB SSD and 4GB of RAMs. It plays back anything and is great for surfin' around. Seldom pulls more than 40w -- sleeps at 5w. It might beat up an HD5450.

The issue is they are going semi-EOL (they have improved versions in production over the last two months with even faster graphics) and the price has been dropping weekly. Your best bet will be with either a Zacate or even a Llano APU but it's going EOL, too -- replaced with the Trinity APU and sFM2.



 


I was hoping that since by now no one had mentioned that the PSU might be bad, that it wouldn't be.

Buying a PSU would really put me over budget. Anything cheaper that would do? 400W seems excessive for a lack of a video card, no? Maybe I could find a smaller one and then use that? BUT then -->

I was looking at that processor in the beginning, but the reason that I opted for the i3 is because of the mobo bundle savings. I would be saving about $50 compared to the i3, but then I'd have to find a mobo on the cheap to acutually realize savings. In addition, I read that the Pentiums are using some older form of intel integrated graphics, whereas the i3 is using the "newer" *(but not 3000, I think) graphics, so I thought that might come into play BUT THEN AGAIN, I'd be using dedicated graphics in the 5450 video card.

The math is as follows:

Buy AMD FX-4100 + MSI mobo for $100 (microcenter bundle)
Buy i3-2100 + mobo for $120 (microcenter bundle)
Buy G620 for $50, and then spend about $50-55 on mobo for a total of $100-105. Are you aware of where I could get a non-ECS/Biostar mobo for super cheap? Fry's used to hand mobos away for free when I last built my computer for the office I was intern'ing at (long time ago), but no longer.

I figured that $20 was worth it to upgrade to the i3. I might not necessarily use integrated graphics, but it does have the higher clock speed, which should help in the long run, right (I intend on keeping this computer a minimum of 4 years, with only a memory upgrade, if necessary)/ I used random internet browsing and this site (which isn't super legit, I think) for reference.

Also, by avoiding the case PSU, that would mean I could substantially save on the case as well. My dad currently is using some old plain manilla folder case that you see a lot of business in the late 90s (and some law offices today!) use. It's big, not sure if all the parts are in there for the new components, and has no special holes for cooling/ventilation. I probably shouldn't use that case, I'm assuming?

THAT would mean that I now need a super budget, ideally, small sized, case. I'd like to spend no more than $20 in a store, and $25 on Amazon. Do you have suggestions? This is not urgent. I do have about 6 weeks for purchase. I do have a Fry's local.
 


I think at $52, I'd rather get the Pentium G620 which is $50 at microcenter, right? But then cost increases because I have to pay full price for a mobo instead of the combo discount that i3 and FX series provides at microcenter. I thought about what you said regarding the SATA/IDE kit and reusing the old hard drive, but it's likely that hard drive is slow and very used (my dad is the second owner of this computer). Probably not going to see a speed increase with old hard drive, and new processor, lol.
 
Also, thoughts on the RAM? Is the 1066 OK, or should I be on the lookout for 1333? I picked the 1066 cause the timings were all lower than 9, so I thought that might be a good thing.
 
well if the g620 is 50$ at micro center (i dont have any nearby so i hadnt checked their pricing) then the celeron must be dirt cheap there, and you can find motherboards the fit it that simply arent very feature ful, but better than most in retail computers (usually stripped down to bare minimum, with very littl eexpansion and few ports usually) are actually fairly cheap if you use h61. also if you use an old hard drive, you can re use the windows i think, and all that unwanted data, you could hash through it and delete most of the stuff they dont want somewhat easily, especially stuff from the previous owner. and hard drisves do limit performance some, mostly only when you actually are loading large files off of them, and a lot of the speed increase if from other parts while running programs, har ddrive shouldnt be to big of a speed factor unless you are gaming, loading lits of stuff at once, or opening programs initially. instead of taking 10 seconds to open a large program, it might take 15-20 with a larger program like say, photoshop. and with the previous hard drive, tyou also wont have to redownload all the programs (that they will use) again, often a plu
 


Thank you, for the ITX suggestion, but I don't think it would fly. The video card I'm using says it wants a minimum of 350W PSU and the ITX case has a 250W power supply. Also, would an ITX case mean I need an ITX mobo or is mATX ok?

EDIT: I swore I read somewhere the 5450 needed a 350W PSU, but now I'm having a hard time verifying it.
 
The Zacate uses the 3rd generation of the AMD Unified Video Decoder (UVD) as opposed to the UVD2 of the HD5450 so you would be backing up as far as graphics hardware acceleration, or DXVA.

The only issue of which I am aware at launch (a year ago) there was limited support for Silverlight (that's what you need for hardware acceleration of NetFlix streams). As far as I know it has improved, but Silverlight5 still does not DXVA.

The Zacate will buzz through Internet surfing, YouTube, flash sites like ESPN3, etc. Works great with MPC Cinema, VLC, BluRay players, XBMC or other front ends.

It slays with an SSD.