disolitude said:
When it comes to mobo, look for a reputable manufacturer. ASUS is usually the best when it comes to overclocking options and sheer reliability. 4 RAM slots is also a must. I would also look for a mobo which has 2X PCIe 2.0 x16 slot. The first slot is x16, but make sure the second slot is at least x8...a lot of them are just x4 for the second which isn't enough if you ever decide to SLI 2 GTX570s. Don't go for a 3 way SLI mobo though unless you're spending more than 250. Sub 200 mobos with with 3 PCIe slots are questionable quality or useless (PCIe X8,X8,X4 speeds are pointless) 140 bucks spent on an asus, MSI or EVGA motherboard should buy you a good product. You need a 1155 sandy bridge compatible socket. Intel 1366 socket ones may be on sale, but they are no good for the newest i5... And the CPU cooler which comes with any Intel or AMD chip blows. You really need an aftermarket one to do any sort of overclocking. NH-D14 is the best air cooler at the moment and is not too expensive for how good it is. It even beats a lot of water cooling solutions. Beware though, it is MASSIVE and you need a big case. |
Lol most of the bolded didn't make much sense >_<
My biggest fear is we talked to my uncle and he said building your own computer is a pain because getting everything to be compatible with each other can be pretty tough....he said if you screw up and something turns out not to be compatible with the motherboard your out all the money you spent on it.
Would a motherboard like this support the GTX 570? Cause this is the one I'm thinking of.
And are all Harddrives and Solid state drives compatable with pretty much everything?







