New PC or New Motherboard?

Thenura

Member
Apr 6, 2007
8,308
8
0
If you don't want to spend big bucks on a new PC, consider upgrading your old system's motherboard and CPU. This can boost the machine's performance and give you access to the latest technologies. It can also save you hundreds of dollars.

What you won't get is a new hard drive, optical drive, or operating system, though the new motherboard gives you the option of upgrading these components later. When you do it yourself, you choose the make, model, and cost that serve you best, rather than settling for what's preloaded in an off-the-shelf machine.

For as little as $200 to $350, you can purchase a motherboard with a new Pentium 4 or Athlon processor and 512MB of RAM. (Visit this link to check the latest motherboard prices.) That's hundreds of dollars less than the retail cost of a midrange PC that supports AGP 8X graphics cards, Serial ATA drives, and the other advanced features that your new motherboard is likely to offer.


Motherboard Buyers Guide

Size matters: Most desktop PCs sold in the last few years conform to the ATX form factor (as do most motherboards), but not all do. Many small or ultrabudget systems are based on other designs, and some PCs from HP/Compaq, IBM, and other big-name vendors aren't ATX-compatible. Refer to your computer's documentation to see if the new motherboard will fit inside its case.

Find the right CPU: The optimal combination of CPU price and performance may lead you to early versions of Athlon XP and Pentium 4 processors: Retail boxed versions of 1- to 2-GHz AMD Athlon XP processors cost less than $100, while Pentium 4 processors running at comparable speeds are less than $130. OEM versions of both (that's minus the fancy box, the cooling fan, and sometimes a warranty) may be priced considerably lower. Avoid older Pentium 4 processors with 256KB of L2 cache. CPUs with 512KB cache are faster and well worth the small added expense.

Be picky: Steer clear of no-name vendors and buy from established manufacturers only.

Pay for power: Your old PC's power supply may not have enough wattage or may lack the 12-volt amperage needed to run some Pentium 4 and Athlon motherboards. Check the new motherboard's requirements against the specs on your power supply. If in doubt, buy a power supply that generates 300 watts or more,

Faster is better: A motherboard's frontside bus speed is the rate at which data moves between the CPU and RAM. FSB speed can have a greater effect on overall system performance than listed CPU speed, which is a multiple of the FSB speed. The faster the FSB, the better.

Get it all: Your new motherboard needs PCI slots and USB ports, two UltraATA/100 connectors, parallel and serial ports (if you use these), and at least two DIMM slots for RAM (DDR RAM is best). For a little extra money, you can get Serial ATA, ethernet, RAID, FireWire, Wi-Fi, and other advanced features.

Sight and sound off: Some low-cost motherboards have sound and graphics functions built in. The quality of these integrated functions is often marginal. Make sure that any built-in sound and graphics can be disabled, and that separate audio and graphics boards can be added.

Minimize Your Mousing

For people in a hurry, every unnecessary mouse movement is an aggravation. Windows 2000, Me, and XP let you set the pointer to automatically move to commonly used buttons in dialog boxes. Click Start, Settings, Control Panel (or Start, Control Panel in XP), and click or double-click Mouse (choose "Printers and Other Hardware" first if you're in XP's Categories view, or "View all Control Panel options" if you're in Me's "commonly used" view). Now select Pointer Options, check the box labeled "Automatically move pointer to the default button in a dialog box" (the option's wording varies slightly in Windows 2000), and click OK.
 

Anusha

Member
Jun 13, 2006
25,864
5
0
But you know, upgrading the motherboard means most of the times, upgrading the CPU, RAM, VGA card and possibly hard disk and power supply too!!
 
cool tipz

hmmmmmmm I think gng 2 a core 2 duo is the best thing 2 do nwadays.:yes: :yes: :yes: Poddak gana wadi thama,,,, habai overall futureproof pc 1k hadanna puluwan.. c2D supp karana samahara M/B s onboard VGA thiyenawa, thawa pci-xpress slot 1kuth thiyenawa.. Ekanisa hodama wade C2D yana 1ka..Ethakota thawa 3-4yrs wath computer 1 upgrade nokara enna puluwan... Ahh thawa deyak--> puluwan tharam Ram gahala XP walama enna.;) ;) ;) ;) ;)
 

Anusha

Member
Jun 13, 2006
25,864
5
0
rasikarandunuge666 said:
hmmmmmmm I think gng 2 a core 2 duo is the best thing 2 do nwadays.:yes: :yes: :yes: Poddak gana wadi thama,,,, habai overall futureproof pc 1k hadanna puluwan.. c2D supp karana samahara M/B s onboard VGA thiyenawa, thawa pci-xpress slot 1kuth thiyenawa.. Ekanisa hodama wade C2D yana 1ka..Ethakota thawa 3-4yrs wath computer 1 upgrade nokara enna puluwan... Ahh thawa deyak--> puluwan tharam Ram gahala XP walama enna.;) ;) ;) ;) ;)
Aiyo C2D ekak aran XP wala inna lajja nedda? :P
 

Anusha

Member
Jun 13, 2006
25,864
5
0
rasikarandunuge666 said:
Not necessarily:confused: :confused: ...in most cases a VGA upgrade and a PSU upgrade can avoided if u choose the components with care..:yes: :yes: I think a tour of the Unity is indicated;) ;)
I didn't say "definitely", but that's what happened to me (was upgrading from AthlonXP 2600+) because one I couldn't find AthlonX2 S939 CPUs in 2006 November ay Unity Plaza. :angry: If I could fine one, then I only had to upgrade the motherboard and the CPU. I would have upgraded the VGA eventually, but it wasn't required to get the system up and running since the motherboard I was looking at, had integrated graphics (GF6150).

So I went with the C2D system, which meant, new mobo, new CPU, new RAM, new VGA ('cos PCI-E and integrated graphics sux), new HDD (because I had 2 IDE HDDs, and only one IDE port came with almost every mobo).....
 

Anusha

Member
Jun 13, 2006
25,864
5
0
rasikarandunuge666 said:
Im on the same configuration as well:cool: :cool: :cool: but.. when I render of my Maya scenes... the d*** system crashes...:angry: :angry: And hei gez what when I do it n my friends p4 XP? It at least churns a couple frames b4 t crashes..
There must be a problem with your system. Probably driver related or even memory related. I don't think the CPU had anything to do with it.

I didn't render long scenes, but I just fiddled with Maya 2007 x64 and it didn't crash. Currently don't have it installed, because I restored from a fresh installation about a wekk ago and didn't want to installed it as I didn't need it. Gotta grab Maya 2008 x64 release and try. ;)

Maybe if you are using Vista, you better upgrade to latest release if possible, because appz for Vista are still in childhood :D
 

Anusha

Member
Jun 13, 2006
25,864
5
0
rasikarandunuge666 said:
Nyway I have 8.5:D :D Cant find 2008 nywre still:( :( .... And to ur earlier post.. OFcourse f u r dng a major platfrm upgrade u r deff gng 2 hve 2 chnge a lot...;)
Found a torrent from demonoid, and now there are rumours that demonoid was shut down by Canadian Recording Industry Association!!! :angry:

Found another torrent from a private tracker, but didn't downloaded it yet...Hoping demonoid will come back online....:(