Author Topic: New PC: biggest bang for the buck?  (Read 123667 times)

Offline Nigel Ball

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Re: New PC: biggest bang for the buck?
« Reply #90 on: 2010 October 07 03:21:15 »
Hi all

My new PC arrived yesterday  :D

Niall suggested I post the spec of the machine in this thread as I announced it's arrival yesterday on another thread I had started on Windows 64

Hardware is

DELL Optiplex 980
6Gb RAM
i7 processor 860 @ 2.80GHz (8 cores)
Windows 7 64 bit OS

and below the picture that made me smile with contentment yesterday

Nigel Ball
Nantwich, Cheshire, United Kingdom

Takahashi FSQ-106 at f/8, f/5 and f/3.6 on AP900, Nikon 28 mm and 180mm f/2.8
SBIG STL-11000M, Astrodon LRGB, 5nm Ha
ST-10XME, Astrodon HaLRGB
www.nigelaball.com

Offline Carlos Milovic

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Re: New PC: biggest bang for the buck?
« Reply #91 on: 2010 October 07 08:50:00 »
Hi guys

Since by budget is a bit low, I think I'll buy AMD (also I like them more, as company... but this is another story). This are the main components I'm considering. Suggestions are highly wellcome.

CPU: AMD Phenom II X6 1055T AM3
MB: Asus AMD M4A785TD-V EVO A/L/V (AM3) (with ATI Radeon HD 4200, which I think will work fine for my dual monitor setup)
HDD: Seagate Sata2 1 Tb 7200 rpm
RAM: Kingston DDR3 HyperX LOVO 4Gb 1600MHz PC3-12800 (2Gbx2) (maybe two of these, for 8Gb total).
Tower: Spektra ATX 550w Shinobi Black

What do you think?
Regards,

Carlos Milovic F.
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Offline Carlos Milovic

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Re: New PC: biggest bang for the buck?
« Reply #92 on: 2010 October 25 09:32:13 »
Just to make an update ;) This was the final setup I builded:

CPU: AMD Phenom II X6 1055T AM3 (~$260)
MB: Asus AMD M4A89GTD PRO (with ATI Radeon HD 4290) (~$200)
HDD: Western Digital Sata3 1 Tb 7200 rpm - 64Mb cache (~$120)
RAM: Corsair XMS3 DDR3 2x2Gb 1600MHz PC3-12800 (~$120)
Tower: Cooler Master Elite (~$60)
Power: Cooler Master eXtreme 550W (~$80)

Total: ~$840
A bit more expensive than in USA or EU, but still a good trade between price and quality. I have not yet tweaked the MB to perform overclocking, but it is pretty easy to achieve. Toying a bit with the automatic configurations, yielded a improvement of nearly 400Mhz on each processor, while all 6 are enabled, and almost 1000MHz with only 3 of them (AMD uses a technology that boosts the clock speed of the first processors if the other are not currently used, dynamically). So, I'm quite happy with it as it is right now :)
Regards,

Carlos Milovic F.
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Offline georg.viehoever

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Re: New PC: biggest bang for the buck?
« Reply #93 on: 2010 October 25 11:29:15 »
...Toying a bit with the automatic configurations, yielded a improvement of nearly 400Mhz on each processor, while all 6 are enabled, and almost 1000MHz with only 3 of them (AMD uses a technology that boosts the clock speed of the first processors if the other are not currently used, dynamically). So, I'm quite happy with it as it is right now :)

maybe you could try Vicent's benchmark http://pixinsight.com/forum/index.php?topic=1052.msg10478#msg10478 and report the numbers.

Georg
Georg (6 inch Newton, unmodified Canon EOS40D+80D, unguided EQ5 mount)

Offline Carlos Milovic

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Re: New PC: biggest bang for the buck?
« Reply #94 on: 2010 October 25 12:07:02 »
Thanks for the link :)

Just for testing, this was at work (university, biomedical imaging center):

Intel Core 2Quad 2.40GHz - 4Gb RAM
Results
- Benchmark: 43.77s
- Parallel B. : 26.63s
(average of three)

Standard console behavior :)
Regards,

Carlos Milovic F.
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Offline Carlos Milovic

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Re: New PC: biggest bang for the buck?
« Reply #95 on: 2010 October 25 15:06:14 »
Ok, here are the numbers for my current setup, no overclocking (X6@2.8GHZ-RAM@1.6GHz):

- Benchmark: 18.273s
- Parallel B.: 7.877s

Again, mean of three, and standard console. Other programs running as in normal usage.
Regards,

Carlos Milovic F.
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Offline Nigel Ball

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Re: New PC: biggest bang for the buck?
« Reply #96 on: 2010 October 26 14:50:44 »
And mine

Benchmark  19.9s
Benchmark Parallel 7.8s

DELL Optiplex 980
6Gb RAM
i7 processor 860 @ 2.80GHz (8 cores)
Windows 7 64 bit OS

Nigel Ball
Nantwich, Cheshire, United Kingdom

Takahashi FSQ-106 at f/8, f/5 and f/3.6 on AP900, Nikon 28 mm and 180mm f/2.8
SBIG STL-11000M, Astrodon LRGB, 5nm Ha
ST-10XME, Astrodon HaLRGB
www.nigelaball.com

Offline NKV

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Re: New PC: biggest bang for the buck?
« Reply #97 on: 2010 November 21 06:22:30 »
My new box i7-950 24Gb-1333 2xSSD.
Performance is good. 8)

Offline Nocturnal

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Re: New PC: biggest bang for the buck?
« Reply #98 on: 2010 November 21 21:32:10 »
24 Gb? Only 3 GB? I'd get a little more  :)

Seriously assuming you meant 24 GB that's an insane amount of memory. Why so much? Do you intend to run lots of VMs? That's why I recently upgraded from 6 to 12 GB. Without VMs I never got over 4 GB of memory used. Add a 2 GB Linux VM and memory was getting tight.
Best,

    Sander
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Edge HD 1100
QHY-8 for imaging, IMG0H mono for guiding, video cameras for occulations
ASI224, QHY5L-IIc
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Offline NKV

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Re: New PC: biggest bang for the buck?
« Reply #99 on: 2010 November 21 22:20:16 »
Without VMs I never got over 4 GB of memory used.
Without VMs I have got over 17 GB of memory used. ;)

Offline Nocturnal

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Re: New PC: biggest bang for the buck?
« Reply #100 on: 2010 November 22 12:00:22 »
Well clearly if you need the memory you need the memory :)
Best,

    Sander
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Edge HD 1100
QHY-8 for imaging, IMG0H mono for guiding, video cameras for occulations
ASI224, QHY5L-IIc
HyperStar3
WO-M110ED+FR-III/TRF-2008
Takahashi EM-400
PIxInsight, DeepSkyStacker, PHD, Nebulosity

Offline MikeP

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Re: New PC: biggest bang for the buck?
« Reply #101 on: 2010 December 07 04:25:50 »
New PC is now assembled and working.  Quite similar spec to Carlos, so I have borrowed his format:

CPU: AMD Phenom II X6 1075T 3.2GHz
MB: Asus AMD M4A89GTD PRO/USB3
HDD: 3 x Western Digital Sata3 Caviar Green 500Gb 7200 rpm - 32Mb cache
RAM: G.Skill Ripjaw DDR3 4x2Gb
Tower: Cooler Master Elite 335
Power: Novatech Powerstation 600W
OS: Windows 7 Professional 64 bit

One of the disks contains the operating system, installed programs and their various hardwired data storage requirements.  The other two are set up under RAID 1 using Windows 7's inbuilt capabilities and I use it / them for everything else.

It is significantly faster than my old machine but anything up-to-date would be anyway.  Microsoft seemed to have made the OS much more friendly and helpful.  For example, I'd bought two new Wireless N cards one of which I'd installed in the new PC - during the install of Windows 7 I set up wireless networking by accepting the SID from a list and entering my key - and job done.  When I swapped out my old card from my old XP machine, it was a 30 minute job to get the drivers updated and the configuration done - not hard, just messy by comparison.

Slightly off topic, my old Netgear router had gone on the blink a while ago and I'd replaced it with the BT Home Hub I was given as part of my broadband package.  That has now been replaced with a Billion router.  Sadly, its wireless range does not seem much better but its throughput .... two nights ago, I set a new record for me of 600+ Kb/sec downloading - about 3 times faster than my previous best.

I've just asked for a Windows 7 64 bit trial version of PI so I can be sure there are no problems and I'll be sending some euros to Juan and his team.  Absolutely cracking piece of software.  Just wish I could learn to use it better  :)

Mike
An embarrassing number of telescopes
EQ6 Pro
Atik 16HR, SX Lodestar, SX filter wheel, SX OAG
Filters - Baader narrowband, Astronomik LRGB
Windows 7 Pro

Offline RobF2

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Re: New PC: biggest bang for the buck?
« Reply #102 on: 2011 February 23 04:57:38 »
Hopefully I've run the Benchmarking PSM correctly on the RGB.fit image:

Intel Qual Q6600 @2.726mHz (slight overclock)
Win XP 32 Home
4GB DDR2 RAM 800 MHz
9.7s (console open)
FSQ106/8" Newt on NEQ6/HEQ5Pro via EQMOD | QHY9 | Guiding:  ZS80II/QHY5IIL | Canon 450D | DBK21 and other "stuff"
Rob's Astropics

Offline Harry page

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Re: New PC: biggest bang for the buck?
« Reply #103 on: 2011 March 06 06:29:02 »
Hi

Ok after running the bench mark on my laptop and got 35.2 sec I think its time to upgrade

Is the i7 the wat to go  O:)

Harry
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Offline georg.viehoever

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Re: New PC: biggest bang for the buck?
« Reply #104 on: 2011 March 06 06:35:56 »
Yes, i7-2xxx is probably the way to go. I read that the Sandy Bridge generation also give some nice performance boosts compared to the previous i7 generation. Only, you'll have to wait for another month or so until Intel as fixed the problem with the chips set.

Georg
Georg (6 inch Newton, unmodified Canon EOS40D+80D, unguided EQ5 mount)