System Builder Marathon, June 2011: Alternative $2000 PC
Table of contents
- 1. An Unexpected Turn
- 2. New Components
- 3. Hardware Installation And Overclocking
- 4. Test Settings
- 5. Benchmark Results
- 6. Conclusion
System Builder Marathon, June 2011: The Articles
Here are links to each of the five articles in this month’s System Builder Marathon (we’ll update them as each story is published). And remember, these systems are all being given away at the end of the marathon.
To enter the giveaway, please fill out this Google form, and be sure to read the complete rules before entering!
Day 1: The $2000 Performance PC
Day 2: The $1000 Enthusiast PC
Day 3: The $500 Gaming PC
Day 4: Performance And Value, Dissected
Day 5: Tom's Hand-Picked SuperCombo
Introduction
Our most recent System Builder Marathons have included a fourth PC. The first three are generally the product of reader feedback from one quarter to the next. We came up with the Day 5 SuperCombo to give one builder (Ed.: It has always been Thomas' $2000 build, so far) the opportunity to hand-pick the parts he'd want in his own machine.
This time, we didn't plan on following through. When asked what I'd improve on the original $2000 build, I told Chris that I wouldn't change anything; for the first time in a while, there would be no fourth machine. But after the feedback started coming in from Day 1, we couldn't help but place a rush order to Newegg for the parts for another machine with a couple of superficial tweaks based on the feedback.
And after all, we were still itching for one more opportunity to give away hardware to our readers. If you haven't yet entered this quarter's giveaway, look up at the top of the page and be sure you do.
Aside from our inability to ship prizes internationally (thank the IRS for that), the second-most frequent complaint we read was more of a division between readers of various aesthetic tastes. While some liked the $2000 PC’s simple and clean appearance, others thought its case was overpriced for such a plain black box. The most recommended replacement part was Cooler Master’s HAF X.

Case performance comes down to two things: cooling and noise. An exceptionally cool-running case could help overclocking, and thereby allow improved system performance. Yet, variability in the manufacturing of other components could have an even larger impact on temperatures and overclocking, so for today’s article we retained the exact motherboard, CPU, memory, and CPU cooler from our original build. The winner of the fourth machine will get all of the same parts, though.
| $2000 PC Components | ||
|---|---|---|
| Motherboard | ASRock Z68 Extreme4: LGA 1155, Intel P67 Express | $190 |
| Graphics | 2 x MSI R6970-2PM2D2GD5: Radeon HD 6970 2 GB, CrossFire | $680 |
| Processor | Intel Core i7-2600K: 3.4GHz-3.8GHz, 8 MB Shared L3 Cache | $315 |
| Memory | G.Skill F3-12800CL8D-8GBXM: DDR3-1600 C8, 4 GB x2 (8 GB) | $75 |
| System Drive | 2 x A-Data S599 64GB, SATA 3Gb/s SSD | $240 |
| Storage Drive | Samsung F3 HD103SJ 1 TB, 7200 RPM HDD | $55 |
| Optical | LG WH12LS30 BD-RE: 12x BD-R, 16x DVD±R | $95 |
| Case | Cooler Master HAF X RC-942-KKN1 | $190 |
| Power | Seasonic SS-850HT: 850 W, ATX12V v2.31, 80 PLUS Silver | $125 |
| Heat Sink | Xigmatek Gaia SD1283 | $30 |
| Total Cost | $1,995 | |
Note that we also updated the optical drive, due to the original build’s drive being discontinued. A reduction in memory price makes the case primary in total system cost difference.
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The HAF X. Not a bad case, but it's SO damn UGLY!
Tastes differ, but this case is plain ugly and rather loud too. I'm a big fan of Silverstone and Lian Li cases, they're simple, elegant and quiet.
Then again, great for the HAF X lovers.
i was thinking of a similar build but id rather go with an antc case than this, they just seem to look so much better
I really don't get what people see in the HAF X - yeah OK it's huge and will fit anything inside it, but if you have the money to buy one of the top-end motherboards and/or a monster £600 GPU (or 2) then you have the money to get a Temjin or similar high-end chassis, not that fugly plastic crap.
Plus the cooling performance of the HAF X is done so at the expense of being quiet.
Silverstone FT02 - best air cooling case on the market in every respect.
i love the seasonic psu great solid performance but please consider this psu
http://www.newegg.com/Product/Prod [...] 6817194083
I couldn't agree more with the comments against the case...plastic? no air filters? Better leave you old case open, you get the same amount of dust inside, but the noise will be significantly lower
Aluminum is the way, +1 for Lian Li (not that Silverstone are bad)