Any advice on upcoming first build 01-22-2025, 02:58 PM
#1
I'm planning out the parts for my first PC build after years of playing on a gaming laptop. These are the specs and prices of the parts I've selected currently, any advice on changes or additions would be really appreciated!
r7 7700 (£150/$185)
lianli galahad trinity sl-inf 240 (£130/$160)
asrock x870 pro rs WiFi (£215/$265)
silicon power 32gb ddr5 6000/cl30 (£100/$123)
crucial t700 1tb pcie5x4 (£120/$150)
galax 3080Ti HOF SECONDHAND (£515/$640)
lianli o11d mini (£130/$160)
lianli sf750 (£130/$160)
2x lianli sl-inf (£66/$80)
5x lianli sl-inf reverse (£175/$215)
TOTALS: £1730/$2140
(This post was last modified: 01-22-2025, 03:00 PM by rusti17.
Edit Reason: forgot to add prices
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Nine Years of Service
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RE: Any advice on upcoming first build 01-24-2025, 04:23 PM
#2
Supposedly the lianli SFX PSUs are loud, whether or not this is true, I'm not entirely certain, that may be an important factor in your decision.
The amazon page for the Silicon power RAM states its a frequently returned item, and from what I understand they don't exactly have the best reputation with SSDs either, so you may want to look elsewhere, perhaps TEAMGROUP T-Create Expert Overclocking 10L DDR5 32GB Kit ?
I hope you enjoy the build process, it can be fun, but the most time consuming and frustrating step in my builds tends to be cable management, so definitely order some Velcro straps or tie-ties to help out with that. It also helps to plan out everything before you get building, for example, assemble the motherboard outside of the case with just enough functionality to get a good POST test in, remember that the first boot always takes the longest, so give it a few minutes + RAM Training time. This prevents you from having a headache if something goes wrong after you spent all that time building only to forget a cable needed to be plugged in.
COM1 Serial User.
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Eight Years of Service
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RE: Any advice on upcoming first build Today, 12:15 AM
#3
If you're in Europe, pricing might be different, but in the US the 7700X (which has a higher base clock than the 7700 in your list) can be had at almost the exact same price. So, free performance. Going for water cooling should mean that CPU thermals won't be an issue either.
You probably don't want a Gen5 (PCIe 5.0) NVMe. They have thermal issues, and the increase in read/write speeds won't be noticed. Maybe go for something like the Crucial P3 Plus.
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