Crashman :
Onus :
I like the idea of seeing what would happen if the current builds were "fixed." This will give useful information on the future-resistance of each build.
Otherwise, three machines at the same budget has provided some excellent data points. IMHO, this is the best SBM we have seen in a good while now. They're one of my favorite features of the site, and this quarter's series was exceptional.
Another idea would be to keep the same purposes (and budgets) for which these three PCs were built, but randomly assign each one to a different builder; same purpose, same budget, ok who wins?
Randomly...but we each picked our own, it's not as if Eric was assigned the gaming build just because he's filling in for game-system-builder Paul
Right, but now the three purposes are each shuffled to a different builder; can the new builder outdo the original, with the same budget? Or, what lessons were learned that can be applied?
As to future-resistance, Thomas, all you need is a bigger PSU and a stronger graphics card, although you could probably run a GTX960 on the one you have; IMHO your build is by far the most future-resistant. Given that Eric's is limited, by its purpose, to mini-ITX, it might be hard to overcome his thermal issues, and there are no better CPU options. A better cooler may help, and a SSD will boost Storage scores, but he's dead in the water otherwise. Chris, you might be hosed on value effect of upgrades. Do you upgrade to a GTX970? An i5? Yours was an excellent one-off, but seems like a complete rebuild would be needed to "improve" it.
This approach to the SBM was worthy of a repeat, possibly with an even tighter budget, like $700. I would like to see if, in addition to conventional benchmarks, some other measure of "fitness for purpose" could be added. In that context, I'd love to win
any of these three machines. I'd probably give Eric's a SSD, and Chris needs a data drive, but I could turn any of them into a solid daily driver (Thomas, I'd likely leave yours as-is as a non-gamer, and run Necessary Things (a Market America business) on it.