Some changes maybe

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I would get a Western Digital (WD) "Black" drive. I like them because they are (afaik) the only consumer hard drives to have retained a five year warranty since the Thailand floods a couple years ago. That tells me they have confidence in their product, and other companies chopping their warranties (2 years is common) tells me they don't.
Though with a lesser warranty, WD "Blue" drives have also been reliable for me, as have Seagate Barracuda (including the slower LP models).
Is this for gaming, or other uses?
If for gaming, 8GB should be sufficient, and will allow you to increase the size of your SSD (I am using over half of my 250GB-256GB SSDs).
DDR3-1333 is okay, but DDR3-1600 or -1866 may be enough of an improvement that you might notice it. Make sure it needs no more than 1.5V and is CAS9 or lower.
You have already selected a CPU cooler, the Kuhler H2O 650. If you are not interested in overclocking, you don't "need" it.
 
If this is for gaming then your components are to expensive since the i7 4770k has now real advantage over the i5 4670k (save $100)
http://pcpartpicker.com/part/intel-cpu-bx80646i54670k i5 4670k

nothing wrong with the mobo but the MSI gaming mobo is just as good and cheaper (save $30)
http://pcpartpicker.com/part/msi-motherboard-z87g45gaming mobo Z87 G45 Gaming

do you really need 16GB of RAM since you wont need more then 8GB (save $100)
http://pcpartpicker.com/part/gskill-memory-f31866c9d8gab DDR3-1866 Gskills Aries

let me know if you want me to continue, since I'm not sure what the build is for
 
I wanted to hear more about the use before swapping the i7 for an i5, but if it is gaming, only a very few games are finally beginning to show a difference of any significance between the i5 and i7, so that may indeed be a good place to lower costs.
 
I mainly need advide on the memory, and i really wanna have 16 gb. The i7 is what i really want unfortunately, but i need advices on what i could change the Toshiba With? edwardElric and Onus and MJaoune
 
I can not recommend this build.
and since you're not telling you need this for running editing programs or work related reasons, I would guess you're unsure about what to build.
even if budget was no problem I would not recommend components which are of no use to you.
 
I would get a Western Digital (WD) "Black" drive. I like them because they are (afaik) the only consumer hard drives to have retained a five year warranty since the Thailand floods a couple years ago. That tells me they have confidence in their product, and other companies chopping their warranties (2 years is common) tells me they don't.
Though with a lesser warranty, WD "Blue" drives have also been reliable for me, as have Seagate Barracuda (including the slower LP models).
 
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