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Solve : PC parts confirmation?

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Hi guys Ive decided to build my own PC as it is cheaper than buying a build pre made I need to be sure that all of my components are compatible with each other.
These are the parts:
Case - https://www.dabs.ie/products/best-value-black-micro-atx-case---500watt-power-supply--727-03b--7KHG.html
Hard drive- https://www.dabs.ie/products/seagate-momentus-spinpoint-500gb-sata-2-5--5400-rpm-hard-drive-8S08.html
Ram - https://www.dabs.ie/products/corsair-4gb--2x2gb--ddr3-1333mhz-cl9-value-select--desktop-memory-kit-7CLL.html
Processor-  https://www.dabs.ie/products/amd-a4-5300-3-4ghz-fm2-1mb-65w-black-edition-89K2.html
Motherboard-http://www.amazon.co.uk/gp/product/B00GJ3NQ6C/ref=ox_sc_act_title_4?ie=UTF8&psc=1∣=A3P5ROKL5A1OLE

If I am missing anything please left me know and if you could check to see if all if these parts are compatible with each other.
Thanks a million
VellinTrapperOnly thing I see missing is the Optical Drive DVD ROM etc as well as OS. What OS will you be installing and are you migrating the DVD Rom from another computer forwards in which you will want to verify that the optical drive is SATA and not IDE?

Parts are all compatible, but the 5400RPM drive is a slower HDD. I'd go with a 7200RPM drive instead for better performance if it works within your budget.

Lastly the MSI motherboard matches to the other hardware, but I have very little trust in MSI after many problems with their brand over the last 6 years with them for both my systems as well as others that I support. I'd suggest going with Gigabyte, ASUS, or Biostar as brands that I trust and havent had any problems with. Biostar will be the cheapest price of the brands on that list with Gigabyte and ASUS being priced around the same for similar features. Biostar motherboards are good for cheap builds and they are usually feature rich in the BIOS for optimization as well as over clock features, although their VRM's ( Voltage Regulators ) are prone to running warm if you run a max watt CPU and overclock it on top of that. ASUS and Gigabyte MAKE some boards that are better for those who want to stuff maximum supported CPU into the motherboard and overclock the CPU on top of that because they have passive heatsinks on the VRM's on the more costly boards that help reduce heat on the VRM's etc.

Here is a similar motherboard to the MSI which is a Gigabyte brand board that you would have better luck with in lasting. This is one of Gigabytes lower end boards due to the use of a mix of solid state and electrolytic capacitors etc, but I'd trust this Gigabyte board more than the MSI: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813128699

Here is the supported CPU list for the Gigabyte motherboard which shows you also can upgrade later of needed to a more powerful CPU and faster than 1333mhz RAM. http://www.gigabyte.com/support-downloads/cpu-support-popup.aspx?pid=4725

Hi thanks for answering my query, if you dont find could you use the following online stores to find the parts as the newegg sites dont ship to me:
http://www.amazon.co.uk/ref=gno_logo
http://www.dabs.ie/
Thank you so much for your co-operation

And to answer your last question , i will be getting windows 8 and i will be installing it through flash drive as i know how to, so i dont need a dvd reader and an optical drive COMES with the motherboards dont they

I need help building a pc full stop my budget is 543 dollars or 390 euro ,
If anyone has any good builds please post Quote

an optical drive comes with the motherboards dont they

No drives come with motherboard, however the motherboard will likely come with a CD or DVD disc with drivers on it for the motherboard and so you may want to have an optical drive handy that is either internal or external to install the MFR drivers to the system from the provided disc. Windows 8 may have all the drivers you need to run this system, however if Windows 8 is unable to apply the correct ethernet ( network adapter ) driver you will have a system that is built and unable to get onto the internet to download drivers.

One work around for not using an optical drive and installing drivers from MFR disc would be to use another computer with a optical drive and then copy the entire contents off the disc to a USB flash drive and then install the MFR drivers that way off of the flash drive that has the disc contents on it.

Here is a suggested motherboard from Gigabyte and thru amazon: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Gigabyte-GA-F2A88XM-HD3-Motherboard-Socket-Express/dp/B00FKK7A5I/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&qid=1404614986&sr=8-3&keywords=fm2%2B+motherboard

If you need to skimp on the price as much as POSSIBLE, here is one with less features from Gigabyte that I also suggest: http://www.amazon.co.uk/Gigabyte-GA-F2A88XM-DS2-M-ATX-Motherboard-Socket/dp/B00FQ8ARSQ/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1404614986&sr=8-2&keywords=fm2%2B+motherboardAs DaveLembke says, don't get an MSI motherboard, look at Gigabyte and ASUS - The price difference isn't that massive either really.

I would also certainly not be using the power supply that comes with the case - Either get a case without a PSU and buy a decent one separately or replace the one that the case includes with a proper power supply.  For a basic build like yours, something like this would be sufficient: https://www.dabs.ie/products/xfx-450w-proseries--80plus-bronze-core-edition-full-wired-psu-8DK2.html?src=3.  Also notice the price, that is a fairly cheap (but good) power supply yet it costs more than the case + PSU - That surely says something about the quality of the power supply included with that case!  It's the only part of your PC that carries lethal mains voltages, do not cheap out on it!

What are you planning on using this PC for? At that price point you aren't going to get anything really for gaming, for home/office use you may want to consider an INTEL based platform since this will give a better upgrade path in the future and will generally perform better than the low end APUs.

Finally, what is the particular reason you are building it rather than buying one premade?  If it's because you are interested then that's great but at this price point, don't expect it to save money or anything, premade PCs can often work out cheaper at the low end and will come with a full warranty on the entire system.  Custom building is only really important when you are dealing with higher end systems where they need to be deeply customised to fit the specific person's needs.For example, if you were buying premade you could get something like this within your budget: http://www.dabs.ie/products/acer-aspire-xc-600-sff-core-i3-3240-8gb-1tb-dvdrw-win8-9CLN.html?src=3 which is significantly more powerful than the build you have.

Nowadays building at the lower end doesn't really work out cheaper - Manufacturers buy parts in bulk so this saves a lot of money.  It's only really worth it either on high end MACHINES, machines that require a pretty custom specification that isn't available premade or if you want to build it for the fun of building it.


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