December 15, 2009 | Comments Comments

Discover the $1000 Computer for Web/Photo/Audio/Video/3D Workloads

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LIAN_LI_Lancool_PC-K56W

The LIAN LI Lancool PC-K56W, the sleek, well-build case that is featured in this build.

Featuring an Intel Core i7 860 Quad-Core Processor with Hyper-Threading, capable of handling up to 8 threads, 8 GB of DDR3 1600MHz RAM, two 500GB RAID-Class hard drives set up in RAID 0 and much more, the $1000 Computer for Web/Photo/Audio/Video/3D Workloads is an outstanding computer, ready for the most demanding tasks.

This versatile computer was designed in mind for someone whose work consist of:

  • Working on the Web (Development, Media, etc.)
  • Editing photos, with programs such as Photoshop
  • Edit/convert Video or Audio
  • Rendering or working with 3D (Autodesk for example)

But I have never built a PC before!

Make the jump. Do not be afraid. Building a computer has never been more simple.

While the whole process may look overwhelming, if you look at it one part at a time, you’ll realize how simple it really is.

There are countless resources on how to build a computer, which you can find by doing some research on Google or Youtube.

Here are two guides on how to build a computer that I recommend:

This one, from DriverHeaven.net: http://bit.ly/4bhlwb

This one, from maximumpc.com: http://bit.ly/1TgR7X

If you take your time, are careful and follow guides/videos:

You’ll end up with a fully functional computer, either at a lower cost than a comparable Dell PC or with higher performance for the same price, because you will get the best parts that your money can buy, instead of “ok” parts chosen by Dell. The best part? You’ll be proud of a job well done ;)

What if I get stuck or need help?

Simply drop a comment at the end of this post and either a helpful member of this community or myself will answer you. You can also Contact me directly for some assistance. While I’m pretty busy, I’ll try my best to answer you quickly.

What if I’m outdated on what are the current best parts or simply don’t know which parts to pick?

If you don’t have the knowledge or time to choose your parts, simply stick to my recommendations below (In Bold) and you’ll be more than happy. That’s my promise.

Who are you to tell me which parts to choose?!

My name is Mathieu Bourgie, a computer expert with nearly a decade of experience in building the best computers for a given price and I share my knowledge by blogging on Hardware Revolution, where I offer various custom computer builds designs, along with useful articles such as the Best Video Card for your money, to help you figure out what are the best parts for a computer at a given price.

You can read opinions, comments and more left by my readers on the testimonials page.

What if I don’t agree with your choices?

This is the great part of building your own computer(s), you can customize it to your taste. If you have the knowledge and/or the time to learn, you’re free to use my recommendations as a base and then to customize any build just how you want it.

$1000 Computer for Photo/Audio/Video/3D Workloads hardware parts recommendations, short version:

In Bold, you’ll find my recommendations, which offers the best performance possible for a price that fits the overall budget. All parts have been verified to be compatible with each other and only parts proven to be reliable have been hand-picked by me.

What if I want more performance than this build has to offer?

No problem. Included in Italic are the best possible upgrades. They are still priced reasonably in regard to the budget and are all compatible with the rest of the system. (You’ll find the price difference over my recommendation in parentheses).

Now, don’t get me wrong, there are other upgrades, but I focused on telling you which ones offered the most value for your money ;)

In simple terms, if you want a more powerful video card or a different motherboard, simply pick it from the list of recommended upgrades that are in Italic.

Component: Make and Model: Price
Motherboard MSI P55M-GD45 LGA 1156 Intel P55 Micro ATX
ASRock P55 Extreme LGA 1156 Intel P55 ATX
$120
$140 (+ $20)
CPU Intel Core i7-860 2.8GHz LGA 1156 95W Quad-Core $280
Video Card GIGABYTE Radeon HD 4670 1GB GDDR3 HDCP Ready
XFX Radeon HD 5750 1GB GDDR5 HDCP Ready
SAPPHIRE Radeon HD 5770 1GB Vapor-X HDCP Ready
$75
$140 (+ $65)
$180 (+ $105)
RAM 2xCORSAIR 4GB (2 x 2GB) DDR3 1600=8GB(4 x 2GB)
$190
Hard Drive Two Western Digital RE3 500GB for 1TB in RAID 0
Two Western Digital RE3 1TB for 2TB in RAID 0
$180
$320 (+ $140)
Optical Drive LITE-ON Black 24X SATA CD/DVD Burner
$29
Case LIAN LI Lancool PC-K56W Mid Tower
NZXT Guardian 921 Mid Tower
COOLER MASTER Storm Scout Mid Tower
$70
$80 (+$10)
$90 (+$20)
Power Supply Antec 550W Modular Power Supply
Antec EarthWatts 650W 80 PLUS Certified
$55
$85 (+ $30)
Cooling Cpu: Included Intel CPU Cooler
ARCTIC COOLING Freezer 7 Pro Rev.2
Case: 2 x 120mm case fans included with LIAN LI Case
Free
$35
Free
Sound Card 8 Channels Sound Card Integrated
Creative Sound Blaster Audigy SE 7.1 Channels PCI
Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi 7.1 Channels PCI
ASUS Xonar D2X 7.1 Channels PCI E x1
Free
$30 (+ $30)
$70 (+ $70)
$200 (+ $200)
Network 10/100/1000 Mbps integrated on the motherboard Free
Total Not including shipping, handling nor OS $999

Is this the right type of PC for me?

If you’re looking for a PC to do Web/Photo/Audio/Video/3D Workloads, you’re at the right place. If this is not what you’re looking for, check out our other Computer Systems instead.

$1000 Computer for Web/Photo/Audio/Video/3D Workloads Hardware parts recommendations, detailed version:

Motherboard: MSI P55M-GD45 LGA 1156 Intel P55 Micro ATX

This is a Micro-ATX motherboard based on the Intel P55 chipset.

This motherboard features ten USB ports, two PS/2, FireWire, two E-SATA, 10/100/1000 Mbps LAN and 8 channels HD audio., completed by two PCI-Express 2.0 16X (16x / 4x), one PCI-Express 1X, one PCI slot, six SATA ports and the usual IDE port, etc.

For $120, you get everything that you need:
LGA 1156 socket for Lynnfield based Core i5 or Core i7, 4 DIMM slots for DDR3 RAM and plenty of connections. This is a versatile motherboard capable of handling all of your needs.

Recommended alternatives or upgrades:

  1. ASRock P55 Extreme LGA 1156 Intel P55 ATX – $140 (+ $20). For only $20 more, you get a full-size ATX motherboard, Crossfire/SLI support and also support for Socket 775 CPU Coolers. If you wonder, ASRock is owned by ASUS, making great motherboards at a budget price.

CPU: Intel Core i7-860 Lynnfield 2.8GHz 8MB L3 LGA 1156 95W Quad-Core

While at $280, the Core i7 860 is not exactly cheap, you’ll agree with me that it’s definitely worth the money when you’ll see its performance.

Whether it’s for Photo, Video or 3D, the Intel Core i7-860 outperforms the fastest AMD processor, the Phenom II X4 965 3.4GHz and is just a tad slower than the $560 Core i7 870 or the $1000 Core i7 975, while costing way less money.

Video Card: GIGABYTE Radeon HD 4670 1GB GDDR3 HDCP Ready

Programs, such as PhotoShop CS4, are starting to take advantage of the power available in video cards, hence why you see this dedicated video card for this build. The 1GB of GDDR3 will help you shave off several seconds in specific scenarios under PhotoShop CS4 and load photos faster, especially when you’re working with large files.

This video card offers video output via VGA, DVI and HDMI. It supports full HD 1080p video playback, Blu-Ray and more. The video decode engine supports decoding multiple HD streams (useful for picture-in-picture on a Blu-ray movie) and additional post processing effects if you are not a big video purist.

It is also capable of handling some light gaming, depending on your screen resolution and choice of games.

The GIGABYTE Radeon HD 4670 1GB features an after-market cooler from Zalman, keeping it cool and silent.

Upgrades:

  1. XFX Radeon HD 5750 1GB GDDR5 HDCP Ready
    If you intend to play some video games with this computer, a Radeon HD 5750 1GB is pretty much the minimum that you can get by, for gaming on a 17-19″ screen, with a resolution up to 1440 x 900 or so. Based on 40nm manufacturing tech, the Radeon 5750 and 5750 draw very little power at idle and very reasonable power at load. Based on the Radeon 5xxx series, featuring DirectX 11 support. Of course, this card is ready to assist you for Photoshop and other programs that can take advantage of the GPU and 1GB of GDDR5.
  2. SAPPHIRE Radeon HD 5770 1GB GDDR5 HDCP Ready
    Similar to the Radeon HD 5750, except that this is a step-up, offering enough performance for gaming on a 20-22″ monitor, with a resolution up to 1680 x 1050. Offers the same low power consumption and acceleration in programs as the Radeon 5750, along with DirectX 11 support.

RAM: 2 kits of CORSAIR XMS3 4GB (2 x 2GB) DDR3 1600 for a total of 8GB (4 x 2GB)

When it comes to working with large files, the last thing that you want is to run out of RAM and rely on your hard drive, slowing down your system to a halt.

My recommendation is to buy two kits of Corsair XMS3 4GB (2 x 2GB) DDR3 1600MHz RAM, for a total of 8GB of RAM (4 x 2GB).

Hard Drive: Two Western Digital RE3 500GB for 1TB in RAID 0

When you load programs and/or large files, the main bottleneck in your system will be your hard drive(s). In order to improve performance, I recommend getting two Western Digital RE3 500GB hard drives, for a total of 1TB of storage capacity, set up in a RAID 0 array for enhanced performance.

While the RE3 series is more expensive than say the Caviar Blue or Black series from Western Digital, they are specifically made for RAID usage and are covered by Western Digital 5 years warranty.

Optical Drive: LITE-ON Black 24X SATA CD/DVD Burner

The LITE-ON is a 24X DVD/CD Burner, with a SATA interface. This drive is able to read and burn CDs and DVDs. Silent, compatible with all major formats including DVD-RAM.

Also, seeing as DVD Burners often go out of stock, here are a few alternatives that you can use to replace the Sony one. All are SATA based and compatible with the rest of the system.

  1. Sony Optiarc Black SATA CD/DVD Burner with LightScribe
  2. Sony Optiarc Black 24X SATA DVD/CD Burner
  3. HP Black 24X SATA CD/DVD Burner

Case: LIAN LI Lancool PC-K56W Mid Tower

For this build, I went with a sleek, well-build case that is reasonably priced as well. I found that the LIAN LI Lancool PC-K56W matched all my criteria. Includes two 1200rpm 120mm case fans, one in the front and one the back, to assure sufficient, yet silent ventilation for this system.

Recommended alternatives:

  1. NZXT Guardian 921 Mid Tower $80 (+ $10) A nice alternative, featuring temperature monitoring with the LCD in the front of the case. Also featuring two 120mm case fans.
  2. COOLER MASTER Storm Scout Mid Tower $90 (+ $20) Another great alternative, with quite an unique look.

Power Supply: Antec 550W Modular Power Supply

Offering 550W (Not that should rely on this information only as I often point in posts such as Warning: 6 Surefire Ways of Blowing Up Your Computer Due to an Inadequate Power Supply) but more importantly 32A (or 384 Watts) on the the 12V lines.

According to the eXtreme Power Supply Calculator, this system will consume about 300W at its peak, that is with the Radeon HD 5770 1GB upgrade, leaving you an healthy 250 Watts of overhead. Meaning that this power supply is able to handle your power requirements if you overclock and/or use upgrades that I recommend in this article, even in the worst case scenario.

Recommended upgrades:
Antec EarthWatts 650W 80 PLUS Certified – $85 (+ $30) Offering more power and higher efficiency if you want more overhead and/or higher power efficiency. Capable of delivering up to 45A on the 12V lines.

Cooling:
Included intel CPU Cooler with CPU
2 x 120mm case fans included with the Case

Cpu Cooler: I recommend the Intel cooler included with the CPU because it will the job for the majority of people and to keep costs down.

However, if you have any intention of overclocking, I cannot stress enough the importance of a good cooler. The ARCTIC COOLING Freezer 7 Pro Rev.2 92mm Fluid Dynamic CPU Cooler offers great value regarding performance for the price, being one the best heatsink at a great price, it’s really underrated. Best part is that at that price, they even include good thermal grease and a fan controller to adjust the speed so it stays silent as well.

Sound Card: Integrated 8 Channels Sound

Integrated with the motherboard, this sound card will handle many different sound setups, including headphones, a microphone and more. While integrated audio on a PC used to be absolutely horrible, it has gotten much better in the last few years, thus why I have no trouble recommending it.

Recommended upgrades:

While onboard sound will be good enough for the vast majority of people, if you have serious audio equipment or are au audiophile who enjoys high fidelity sound, the following upgrades will suit you better.

  1. Creative Sound Blaster Audigy SE 7.1 Channels PCI – $30
  2. Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi 7.1 Channels PCI – $70
  3. ASUS Xonar D2X 7.1 Channels PCI Express x1 – $200

Network: 10/100/1000 Mbps LAN

Integrated with the motherboard, this network adapter will allow you to access your local network and Internet by using a Ethernet (RJ-45) cable.

Cost: Free – Integrated

Recommended operating systems:

The operating system cost, if there’s one, is not included in the total cost. The two reason for this are that the cost represents only hardware and because you may be able re-use a previous license, go with an open-source OS such as Linux or , if you’re so inclined and are aware of what you’re doing, use torrents. Nevertheless, here are some recommendations:

Windows 7

Despite Linux starting to support some games, Windows still is the platform of choice for the best performance at the moment. Considering that you’ll have 8GB of RAM, you’ll need a 64-bit version, as 32-bit is limited to 4GB of memory for the entire system, which is not enough now, nor in the future if you upgrade.

Windows 7 is by far better than Windows Vista, looks better, more functional, less annoying, consumes less resources and brings DirectX 11 to the table.

Three Available Versions:

  1. Windows 7 Home Premium: The basic edition, with all the looks, most of the functionality and DirectX 11.
  2. Windows 7 Professional: If you want the virtual XP mode, you’ll need at least the Professional edition. Also required if you want to backup to a network, using the built-in backup mode in Windows.
  3. Windows 7 Ultimate: To help protect data on your PC and portable storage devices against loss or theft with BitLocker and to work and switch between 35 languages.

OEM vs Retail:

The OEM version allows you to only install it once on a computer. You cannot transfer the license to another computer in the future and you do not receive support from Microsoft. It’s the same type of license you get when you get Windows on a desktop or laptop that you buy from Dell, HP and such. It’s less expensive, but gives less flexibility. Ideal if you intend on keeping your computer for many years.

The Retail version is the full version, which allows you to transfer the license to another computer in the future and you can call Microsoft if you need any form of support. Ideal if you intend on upgrading/changing your computer down the road.

Other than that, you get the same features on both, only the license differs. The price between the two differs obviously.

OEM Versions:

  1. Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit OEM – $105
  2. Microsoft Windows 7 Professional 64-bit OEM – $140
  3. Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate 64-bit OEM - $175

Retail Versions:

  1. Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium Retail – $184
  2. Microsoft Windows 7 Professional Retail – $275
  3. Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate Retail - $292

Linux

A lot of people these days boots more than one OS. Linux is a wonderful choice: powerful, cool, and cheap. Take your pick of distributions and have fun! For Fedora, Ubuntu, Debian, Slackware, and Mandrake, try Distrowatch.com, Cheapbytes.com, LinuxQuestions.org or one of the many others.

What about Word processing, Excel and other Windows-based programs that Iyou need? Linux being an open platform, there are many free alternatives that will answer your needs. For Word/Excel and such, try OpenOffice.

Cost: Free

Conclusion

Did you like this computer build? What you would do to improve the build or this article?

I’m always open to your suggestions and ideas to improve this blog, your blog.

If anything, I invite you to comment on this computer build, share your opinions, what you think about it, etc.

Building this system?

Contact me and let me know how it goes, send me your story, pictures and I’ll publish it on the blog, to share with and help bring confidence to others who are thinking of building a computer for the first time.

Did you enjoy this build? Support me and Hardware Revolution

For each article, I spend many hours of research and many hours of writing/editing and I generously offer it to you and everyone else for free. If you appreciate my work, you can help me cover my costs (Hosting, living, etc.) and support our community by making a donation.

How much should you donate?

I suggest $10 because if you think about it, a consultation for a custom computer like the one in this article, from an expert with a decade of experience like me would cost you $50, if not even more.

Have I mentioned all the time and money that I have saved you through this and all of the other articles available on Hardware Revolution?

Obviously, this is a suggestion. Donate what you can to support us. Thank you very much.

Autodesk

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