
To /r/buildapc readers, this may be slightly repetitive, for that I apologize.
My personal computer recently underwent a massive upgrade. After over 3 years of trust service I gave my Nehalem build the boot. It has served me well and to be honest, it really did not need upgrading, it ran everything well and I expected to see little to no gains in performance. I had gotten the chip as a gift and decided to splurge a bit on the motherboard and picked up the Sabertooth X79, living near Fry’s is awesome. Thanks to the relatively stagnant developments expansion standards everything else carried over, in over the last few months I had already made major upgrades in the GPU, RAM, case, CPU cooler, SSD, and all the peripherals (full specs below). The carryover was a breeze, I expected to only be using 4 sticks of memory, but the motherboard explicitly stated 6 were fine and I even got to keep all 24 GB of RAM. The only close call was the Havik140, the RAM slots were significantly closer to the CPU socket and the Havik was not going to fit horizontally, which wasn’t an issue for me as I previously had it mounted vertically.
Took a day to get everything completely reinstalled, first thing I did was set the one touch overclock to 4.3ghz (awesome feature), did a burn-in with LinX and temps all were under 65, I was very impressed. I then ran BF3 on a 64 player full server, FPS floated between 50-80 with ultra-settings and maxed AA; this was not any noticeable improvement over my i7 920. Despite proving my assumptions correct, I couldn’t help but feel a bit disappointed in my new hardware, this was essentially a $900 upgrade on old hardware and my gaming experience was exactly the same. In my disappointment I turned to work for comfort (like most of us do) and fired up Solidworks. Generally the files I work with are rather large with a lot of parts and rendering can take a while. I decided to give rendering a spin on a case and to my surprise it was at least 4 times faster! It may not have justified the upgrade but my tech addiction had been appeased and I was reinvigorated, not to mention it runs Minecraft like nobody’s business.
To recap, anyone with a quad core Nehalem, using it for anything short of raw calculation or rendering should feel no reason to upgrade to anything right now, you got a great deal on a CPU with a fantastic lifecycle, enjoy it and don’t be envious of 3770’s.
PS: OCZ Power supply is the next thing to get the boot.
-Rob Teller
NZXT. Product Development
Type Item Price
CPU Intel Core i7-3930K 3.2GHz 6-Core Processor
Free
CPU Cooler NZXT HAVIK-140 90.3 CFM CPU Cooler
Preproduction Sample
Motherboard Asus Sabertooth X79 ATX LGA2011 Motherboard
$314.99 @ Fry’s
Memory Patriot Viper II Sector 7 Edition 24GB (6 x 4GB) DDR3-1600 Memory
$94.99 @ Fry’s
Hard Drive Kingston HyperX 120GB 2.5″ Solid State Disk
$109.99 @ Amazon
Hard Drive Western Digital Caviar Green 500GB 3.5″ 5400RPM Internal Hard Drive
$49.99 @ BestBuy
Hard Drive Samsung Spinpoint F4 2TB 3.5″ 5400RPM Internal Hard Drive
$69.99 @ Newegg
Hard Drive Western Digital Caviar Blue 320GB 3.5″ 7200RPM Internal Hard Drive
$49.99 @ Newegg
Video Card EVGA GeForce GTX 680 2GB Video Card
$499.99 @ Undisclosed
Case NZXT Switch 810 Full Tower Case
Preproduction Sample
Power Supply OCZ 700W ATX12V / EPS12V Power Supply
$59.99 @ Microcenter
Fan Controller NZXT Sentry Mix
Preproduction Sample
Monitor Asus VS247H-P 23.6″ Monitor
$174.99 @ Undisclosed
Monitor TCL LE40FHDP21TA 40in LED TV
$399.99 @ Walmart
Operating System Microsoft Windows 7 Ultimate SP1 (64-bit)
Free @ Intel Retail Edge
Keyboard Corsair Vengeance K90 Wired Gaming Keyboard
$99.99 @ Fry’s
Mouse Logitech Performance Wireless Laser Mouse
$64.99 @ Logitech
Fan NZXT FN-140 x 7
Samples
Fan Noctua NF-P14
Sample
Card Reader NZXT Aperture M
Preproduction Sample
LEDs NZXT Hue
Preproduction Sample
Sleeved Cables NZXT Premium Cable Starter Kit
Preproduction Sample