I am prepping for the future as I can't move on the purchase at the moment as it would look strange if I had a better gaming machine than my Son (he is the one who games), but he finishes high school in a year.
So far I have been using whatever was abandoned; which makes choosing so much easier, but leaves me on an old machine with a proprietary 12V power supply.
WANTS
- I have my eye on DDR5 as I like the idea of error correction and reliability is high on my list; I want things to just work and last, but not be too noisy
- Would want 2 internal drives, one for backup without anything hanging externally; the backup drive can be slow (SATA)
- Enough cooling to handle the Summer heat without getting too noisy.
- VRMs able to handle CPU upgrades
DON'T WANTS
- No RGB or windowed case; no over-clocking.
- Don't want an all-in-one or water cooling.
- Don't want to be on the bleeding edge
DON'T NEED
- Don't need a DVD player or small form factor PC
- USB 3 is fine, don't really want cutting edge, but want something that is probably supported by Windows 12
DON'T KNOWS
- Am wondering if the 12V standard for power supplies will become THE standard.
- Haven't figured if Intel or AMD is the way to go.
PREFER
- A video card that will last and can handle the heat (I don't use air-conditioning in the Summer)
- A case that uses larger fans so things stay cool without excessive noise
- A reasonable power consumption
- No need for RAM heatsinks
No real budget limit, but I'm not after squandering; 16 GB RAM would be a good start, but the motherboard should be capable of more.
Now you can maybe see why I prefer to start with a pre-built machine and then figure out my upgrades one by one.
PCPartPicker Part List:
https://pcpartpicker.com/list/8Yp2Kp
CPU: Intel Core i7-13700 2.1 GHz 16-Core Processor ($379.00 @ Amazon)
https://www.techpowerup.com/cpu-specs/core-i7-13700.c2957 65 W TDP, very efficient, very performant, Raptor Lake, but not to be confused with K series, tuned for peak efficiency not extreme performance.
CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-P1 Fanless CPU Cooler ($109.90 @ Amazon)
The Noctua NH-P1 can handle loads lower than 100 Watts rather well. https://www.anandtech.com/show/17240/the-noctua-nhp1-passive-cooler-review/3 That's with no fan either, so with the case fans you'll have excellent CPU performance, with noise levels that don't fluctuate under load.
Motherboard: ASRock Z790 PG-ITX/TB4 Mini ITX LGA1700 Motherboard ($334.99 @ Amazon)
Good VRM, PCIE 5, Thunderbolt 4 so you have a very future proof connector that's useful in all sorts of ways.
2 × USB 3.2 Gen2 (Thunderbolt 4 Type-C)
6 × USB 3.2 Gen2 (Type-A)
1 × RJ-45 2.5 Gbit
2 audio jacks
2 antennas
HDMI
Display Port 1.4
Memory: TEAMGROUP T-Create Expert 32 GB (2 x 16 GB) DDR5-7200 CL34 Memory ($139.99 @ Amazon)
Good, fast and cheap RAM with no frills such as RGB.
Storage: Samsung 990 Pro 1 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive ($69.99 @ B&H)
Great boot drive, very fast and efficient.
Storage: Western Digital Blue SN570 2 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 3.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive ($92.99 @ Amazon)
Great bulk storage drive.
https://www.techpowerup.com/review/wd-blue-sn570-1-tb/
Video Card: Asus DUAL OC GeForce RTX 4060 8 GB Video Card ($299.99 @ Newegg)
Best of the 4060 AIBs, very quiet, idle fan stop, very efficient.
https://www.techpowerup.com/review/asus-geforce-rtx-4060-dual-oc/
Case: Asus Prime AP201 MicroATX Mini Tower Case ($74.99 @ Newegg)
https://www.techpowerup.com/review/asus-prime-ap201/9.html editors choice, excellent cooling and simple aesthetics, I've personally built in this case before.
Power Supply: SeaSonic PRIME Fanless 700 W 80+ Titanium Certified Fully Modular Fanless ATX Power Supply ($298.98 @ Newegg)
I've personally used this PSU in a friends build, reeks of quality and is completely silent, didn't notice any coil whine at all either. Extremely efficient 94%+ and with a very good warranty. No fan, case airflow is enough.
Case Fan: Phanteks PH-F120T30 67 CFM 120 mm Fans 3-Pack ($85.99 @ Amazon)
https://www.techpowerup.com/review/phanteks-t30-120-fan/ Best performing noise normalised fans TPU has ever tested, beating out most 140 mm fans too. With no CPU fan, no PSU fan, GPU fan stop on 2D loads and idle, and no other case fans, you can run these at a speed they will be virtually inaudible sub 30 dBA while still having really good cooling.
Overall this is a build focused on subtle quality, you'll have
very low noise/inaudible, but have a performant system that is capable of integrating future tech well, due to
DDR5, PCIE5 and Thunderbolt 4. You could feasibly skip the 4060 and use the iGPU within the 13700, which is capable for 2D work and light gaming.
Total: $1886.81
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2023-07-10 08:47 EDT-0400
The entire build should use less than 300 W even synthetically maxed out, so it will be light on your electricity build too.
The case is very easy to build in too, as all the panels can be removed.
ASUS Prime case is expertly engineered to provide the exquisite ID design with comprehensive cooling solutions. Prime series case provide daily users and DIY PC builders with a high-performance platform that invites great compatibility and a tasteful, minimalist aesthetic.
www.asus.com
You cannot buy an off the shelf PC with this combination of quality, performance and the ability to operate inaudibly, not to mention warranty length of the componentry.
Pure M.2 NVMe SSD build too, so no SATA power or data cable mess and hassle.
The only option I would also consider is also having one of these enterprise grade Optane units for your OS and core programs drive. Optane is unbeatable for latency, responsiveness, longevity and 4K queue depth 1 random speeds (what most program and OS files use), at ~300 MB/s it's about 3x faster than the fastest PCIE 5.0 drive, while having endurance more than 10x better due to the the physical differences of 3DXpoint cells.
A reasonable option would be having the Optane 118 GB for Windows and most of your programs, and you could have a single 990 Pro 2 TB for everything else. The motherboard does have three M.2 slots though, so you could just add it to the build with no issues.
At $58.99 it's a pretty great deal to basically not worry about your boot drive wearing out, while also enjoying the performance advantages of Optane.
Intel Core 2 Quad Q9550 vs Intel Core i7-13700. Benchmark, test, review, comparison and differences between these CPUs in Cinebench 23 and Geekbench 5
www.cpu-monkey.com
You're looking at a silent build that's five to twenty times faster than your current system.
I'm also pretty sure that, at ~120 W peak and around 5 W desktop, you could deshroud the 4060 and run it fanless, case airflow with three 120x30mm T30 fans would be more than enough, and modern GPUs can control their temperatures easily enough with clocks anyway, even if you didn't do a simple undervolt.
Yep, the card is even designed to easily remove/replace the shroud, perfect.