Will this build work?

coleisme

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Jun 16, 2014
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Hey im building my first computer and I got all the parts but I just am not sure if they all fit so il list them off and if someone can help me il be very thankful

ASUS DVD-Writer 24X DVD+R 8X DVD+RW 8X DVD+R DL 24X DVD-R 6X DVD-RW 16X DVD-ROM 48X CD-R 24X CD-RW 48X CD-ROM Black SATA Model DRW-24F1ST - OEM

Corsair Obsidian 750D Black ATX Full Tower Computer Case

Western Digital WD Blue WD10EZEX 1TB 7200 RPM 64MB Cache SATA 6.0Gb/s 3.5" Internal Hard Drive Bare Drive - OEM

Rosewill CAPSTONE-750-M 750W Continuous @ 50°C, Intel Haswell Ready, 80 PLUS GOLD, ATX12V v2.31 & EPS12V v2.92, SLI/CrossFire Ready, Modular Active PFC Power Supply

G.SKILL Sniper Series 8GB (2 x 4GB) 240-Pin DDR3 SDRAM DDR3 2400 (PC3 19200) Desktop Memory Model F3-2400C11D-8GSR

MSI Z87-G45 Gaming LGA 1150 Intel Z87 HDMI SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 ATX Pro Gaming with Killer Networking & Sound Blaster Intel Motherboard

Intel Core i5-4670 Haswell Quad-Core 3.4GHz LGA 1150 84W Desktop Processor Intel HD Graphics BX80646I54670

CORSAIR Hydro Series H110 Extreme Performance Water/Liquid CPU Cooler. 280mm

SAMSUNG 840 EVO MZ-7TE250BW 2.5" 250GB SATA 6Gb/s TLC Internal Solid State Drive (SSD)

EVGA 03G-P4-2782-KR GeForce GTX 780 3GB 384-Bit GDDR5 PCI Express 3.0 SLI Support Video Card w/ EVGA ACX Cooler
Ands thats it if you can tell me all the parts fit or if im missing anything please let me know and can someone tell me how to hook up liquid cooling cause I just got no idea and thanks for reading
 
Solution
If you want to trim some money off the build, you can get some "slower" RAM at 1600 or 1866 speeds. Faster than that doesn't help all that much. Although, if the 2400 is close enough in price, then it's not a problem.

You don't need a 750W PSU for a single 780. If you're serious about adding a second one in a year or so, keep it. Otherwise you can easily run it on a good 550W PSU, and that might save you some more money. This XFX 550 is only $70 right now ( with $10 MIR. )

And yes, if you're not going to OC the CPU, you can save money on the cooler, mboard, and even CPU. You can save $30 by going to an i5-4460 and you only lose a few hundred MHz, which isn't much in gaming. If you're doing other things that load the CPU...
Unless that's your preferred case, change to Corsair C70 with that military design

Also that cpu cooler and mobo is a waste if you don't OC. Drop the cooler and go for H97/B85 mobo for non-oc. If you OC then go for cheaper CPU cooler (H60)
 
If you want to trim some money off the build, you can get some "slower" RAM at 1600 or 1866 speeds. Faster than that doesn't help all that much. Although, if the 2400 is close enough in price, then it's not a problem.

You don't need a 750W PSU for a single 780. If you're serious about adding a second one in a year or so, keep it. Otherwise you can easily run it on a good 550W PSU, and that might save you some more money. This XFX 550 is only $70 right now ( with $10 MIR. )

And yes, if you're not going to OC the CPU, you can save money on the cooler, mboard, and even CPU. You can save $30 by going to an i5-4460 and you only lose a few hundred MHz, which isn't much in gaming. If you're doing other things that load the CPU threads for heavy number crunching, then the 4670 ( and OCing, ) become nicer to have.
 
Solution