
Bristol Posse said:Depends what you want to do
+1 to everything Bristol said but his first line is the most important. Like how many tracks you will be recording at a time, how many effects you think you will use, if the PC will be in the same room you are tracking or mixing in, etc. As you think about these questions you really should think about "a couple years from now" too.
For my own needs, if I bought that setup today I would probably be tossing it within a year for something more powerful, though you just might want to record your voice and an acoustic for all we know. If you already have a computer, an upgrade might be the better way to go. Even if you don't have a good knowledge of the guts of a PC...you might know someone who does...or get help from us here. Check out this post I made in a different thread for some rock solid parts in that very same price range:
https://homerecording.com/bbs/showpost.php?p=3101411&postcount=5
travisisgood said:based on what i keep reading here and in other posts n such, should i go gigabyte over asus then? because i was going to pick up a bare bones computer with an asus p5q mobo and a core 2 duo 2.8GHz 1066 fsb (don't remember the number). for like 400 Canadian.
thajeremy said:If I go with the parts you recommend, which are well within my price range, all I would need would be a case and power supply to actually build the thing correct? Sorry...I have never actually built a PC....
Be careful with 1066 DDR2 RAM. it's basically overclocked DDR2 800 RAM and often requires non startd voltage to run properly. In this case the RAM quoted needs 2.2 volts (standard is 1.8v)
There's nothing wrong with the RAM suggested, just be aware that tiy will need to check the RAM settings in the Bios to ensure votages and speeds are correct or you may end up with undervolted, glitchy RAM
If your not comfortable doing this you should buy DDR2 800 RAM as this will be running at standard voltage and the speed/bandwidth decrease will not be particularly noticable
I think you listed the CPU twice instead of the PSU.
Oh yea....I cant seem to find out how much RAM that Mobo will support...I plan to install WinXP....I think that only supports up to 3GB, is that correct??