OK, now for a really legit breakdown analysis.
I am going to assume the following:
1) Intel > AMD,
per this benchmark run.2) Intel i5 9600K looks like the most bang for the buck.
3) Socket 1151 has that CPU, and has many inexpensive but powerful motherboard offerings.
4) You want to be able to update this system with better/more parts later, so you want the most potential perks in your existing purchase
5) You really dont care what the system chasis itself looks like, as long as it functions as expected/can accept the board sourced.
6) You want the best video card for your price budget
7) You want to be able to have a very nice SSD, *AND* a spinny disk.
You will want an aftermarket cooler that will fit in the case
9) You will want a quality aftermarket PSU to drive it now, and in the future.
10) your top budgeted price is 1100$. (1000$ +/- 10%, for an allowed range of 900$ to 1100$)
11) You already have a keyboard, monitor, and mouse.
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First up-- CPU. We are going with the i5 9600k in socket LGA 1151 format. Here are our retail contenders for the source.
Amazon weighs in at 275$-ish.NewEgg weighs in at 280$-ish.Pricewatch hints at a lesser retailer, CompSource. CompSource appears to be a "to order" barebones PC reseller. They sell individual parts, as well as combo packages. We will examine what parts we are interested in looking at, then see if they can give us a better deal as a combo later.
Compsource weighs in at 268$-ish.Compsource has our lowest cost sourcing option. Note, this is for the CM8068403874404 chip ID. Not for the BX80684I59600K.
What's the difference? The CM number does not come in a fancy box, or come with a heat sink. (this is fine, we want an aftermarket one anyway.
Source.)
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Next up-- Motherboard
There are many to pick from, but we want one that will do both Xfire and SLI, which has at least one m.2 socket capable of accepting an nvme SSD. Why NVME capable? You like your SSD to be the fastest you can get, right? Thought you did; not all M.2 sockets can do NVME. Keep that in mind. We have a preference for a board that can accept one of the "Very long" style M.2 SSDs as well, because we want to be able to put a huge honker in there if we can afford it. Of available choices, we also want to pick the one with the best user rating (newegg 5 star rating required), at the lowest price. It needs to accept at least 16gb of DDR4 2666 ram.
Here's a list of boards that meet my criteria.
ASUS ROG Strix Z390-H (179$ newegg) (193$ amazon) (186$ compsource)
MSI MPG Z390 GAMING EDGE AC (190$ newegg) (190$ amazon) (194$ compsource)
ASRock Z390 PHANTOM GAMING SLI/ac (168$ newegg) (190$ Amazon) (198$ Compsource)
GIGABYTE Z390 AORUS PRO (180$ newegg) (181$ Amazon) (172$ compsource)
Looks like our winner is the ASRock board from Newegg.
Here's the listing.--------
Next up-- RAM
We want 16gb of DDR4 2666 memory, and we want it both reputable and cheap.
Kingston (229$ newegg) (144$ amazon) (158$ Compsource)
Corsair (141$ newegg) (125$ amazon) (141$ compsource)
Hynix (152$ newegg) (180$ amazon) (150$ compsource)
Looks like the corsair
amazon listing wins.
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Next up-- SSD
We want a 1tb SSD in M.2 format. We want reputable, fast, and cheap-- all together.
I am not going to break down the full research price thing on the SSD, because I have been doing this for 4 hours now.
Suffice to say, I found a
1tb NVME M.2 SSD from Crucial on Newegg for 170$. THIS IS CHEAP. Especially for NVME.
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Next up-- Spinny disk
We want a nice fast SATA spinny disk. This is for all that
porn, pirate isos, torrented stuff Music files, movie files, the swapfile, and the browser caches.
We really DO in fact, NEED a spinny disk. We do not want firefox/IE/Chrome to destroy our SSD with its incessant use of browser cache containing millions of tiny files getting overwritten all the damn time, or to be killed by the windows swap file, which *WILL STILL BE USED* even though we have spec'd 16gb of ram!
We want a reasonably fast SATA one, that is at least 1tb in size, from a reputable manufacturer (FU seagate, go to hell) that is inexpensive.
WD Blue (44$ newegg) (50$ amazon) (44$ compsource)
Toshiba (48$ newegg) (48$ amazon) (52$ compsource)
Hitachi (55$ newegg) (59$ amazon) (113$ compsource)
WD Blue looks like the winner. Will give
Newegg listing----------
RECAP-- Current cost projection:
CPU -- 268$
MB -- 168$
RAM -- 125$
SSD -- 170$
HDD -- 44$
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775$ so far
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Next up -- PSU
We need a 500W PSU. A good one. (Graphics cards are hungry. REAL hungry.)
Rosewill (60$ newegg) (60$ amazon)
Corsair (35$ newegg) (40$ amazon)
Looks like
corsair at newegg wins.
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Next up -- System Chasis
Other than cooling considerations, a case is a case, is a case. We preferrably want a full atx case, to be certain this board will fit, and that our aftermarket cooler will too.
Here's a nice looking
thermaltake view 22 for 50$------------
Next up -- Aftermarket cooler
We need something that is affordable and will do the job. Feel free to upgrade this later.
Cheap thermaltake 95w cooler,
15$ from newegg------------
RECAP #2
CPU -- 268$
MB -- 168$
RAM -- 125$
SSD -- 170$
HDD -- 44$
PSU -- 35$
ATX -- 50$
COOL-- 15$
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875$
This gives us a graphics card budget of around 225$, topping at our projected ceiling of 1100$.
This gives us the following cards:
GTX 1050TI (
newegg listings)
Radeon RX570/RX580 (
newegg listings)
IF YOU CAN, **DO** source a better cooler than the one specc'd!! Getting good parts trumped getting good/adequate cooling in this build. The goal was to make a build that can be updated later. A better cooler is very strongly advised!!