The Best, Cheapest Ways to Upgrade Your PC
Upgrading your PC can be a head-spinning process. Our Lab experts help you sort through the chaos with 18 products that won’t break the bank
These coins can be yours!
The art of the PC upgrade is simultaneously an expression and a test of one’s diagnostic skills, computing savvy, and fiscal sensibilities. Identify the bottleneck. Research the parts that will fix the bottleneck. Remove the bottleneck.
As always, price and performance are the pivot points. After all, you can’t just toss $1,000 at your system to level it up. Well, you can, but in most cases you’d be a fool for doing so.
When the Maximum PC staff convened in conference room Spock to plan this story, we decided to establish some ground rules. First, we challenged ourselves to stick to our theme of a successful budget upgrade. This meant avoiding the tendency to fall back on the most expensive, best-of-breed components in each category.
Instead we forced ourselves to take a more nuanced approach. In each category, we expended considerable energy determining which product(s) owned the sweet spot—top-left on the 2x2 grid if you’re graph-happy—of the price-performance ratio. Staying consistent with our real-world theme, we used real-world pricing from sites like NewEgg and Amazon. Because we’re talking about upgrading an existing machine, you’ll find no case or mobo recommendations here.
Without further adieu, we happily present the results of our research. Below you’ll find a bevy of product recommendations that prove you don’t have to break the bank to achieve substantial gains in performance.
Solid State Drive
It’s easy to argue that a budget SSD doesn’t actually exist. That said, a $125 solid state drive can qualify as a budget upgrade in some contexts—and only some of those contexts involve recreational drugs.
Intel’s X-25V solid state drive (the V stands for Value) doesn’t have the fastest sustained write speeds (think 50MB/s, not 200MB/s), but its sustained read speeds top 150MB/s and its random-access writes are triple any of its peers’. This makes it perfect as an OS drive, which relies more on reads and writes than on sustained writes.
Give your aging laptop a kick in the pants by replacing its hard drive with an SSD.
If you don’t mind keeping data on an external drive or SD card, a 40GB Intel X-25V can also offer a substantial speed boost to the 5,400rpm drive on your netbook or older laptop. And if you’re moving to Windows 7, the X-25V supports TRIM, which will prevent performance degradation. $125 is a lot for a hard drive, but for an SSD, it’s downright reasonable given the performance bump you’ll experience.
✔ SSD for $125
✔ TRIM support prevents degradation
Mechanical Drive
In the old days, the prospective hard drive buyer had to choose between high performance and high capacity. Heck, if you’re planning on upgrading, you probably don’t have either.
Fortunately, while solid state drives have thoroughly usurped the highest end of the performance spectrum, mechanical drives still rule the capacity roost, and they’re only getting faster. To wit: the 1TB Seagate Barracuda 7200.12, which costs just $80 and offers sustained read and write speeds of over 100MB/s.
Speed and capacity unheard of when you bought your rig, now yours for less than $100.
While it can’t match the speeds or random-access times of WD’s VelociRaptor drives or SSDs, the 1TB Barracuda is capacious enough for all your apps and data—unless you’re in the habit of ripping Blu-ray discs, of course. So, if your OS drive is getting long in the tooth (or just running out of room), moving to a 1TB Barracuda 7200.12 will buy you some breathing room and a substantial speed boost.
✔ 1TB for $80 defines Budget Upgrade
✔ Perfect single-drive solution
Optical Drive
If you’re currently performing DVD chores with a 16x burner, an upgrade to a higher burn-speed rating is beyond cheap (shoot, our current Best of the Best 22x Samsung SH-S223 is $20), but not all that satisfying in terms of performance gains. With DVD media stuck at 16x, higher-rated drives only exceed that limit when burning to discs of a particular brand. And even then, you’re looking at a time savings of maybe a minute. Big whoop.
In our opinion, the BD burner is still too pricey an upgrade for its limited usefulness, but a BD ROM combo drive, like Samsung's SH-B083L, makes sense.
Instead, consider the benefits of upgrading to a BD-ROM combo drive. You can get Samsung’s SH-B083L for $100. It gives you the ability to enjoy HD Blu-ray movies on your newly upgraded display, while still offering respectable 16x DVD+/-R write speeds. In our tests, the SH-B083L’s performance was on par with the more expensive Plextor PX-B320SA in everything but DVD ripping, where the Samsung took 15:17 to copy a dual-layer disc vs. 10:47.
✔ Affordable, speedy blu-ray performance
Videocard
When it comes to videocards, you can count on today’s $300 product being superior to the top-shelf product from two generations back. That’s certainly the case with cards based on the ATI Radeon HD 5850 GPU, which not only deliver superb performance, but do so without requiring a massive power supply.
What might it be replacing? If your gaming rig is three years old and you invested in a high-end videocard, it would have been based on Nvidia’s 8800 GTX, and the card alone would have set you back $600. Besides costing a fortune, that card required a massive heatsink and fan and sucked power from two 6-pin power cables in addition to what it drew from the PCI Express bus (165 watts in total). That GPU boasted amazing performance at the time, and it heralded the arrival of DirectX 10. Today, the card is performance-limited with next-gen DX10 games and it doesn’t support DX11 at all.
At $300, the Radeon HD 5850 is a great deal.
A Radeon HD 5850 card will deliver excellent performance and should remain viable for years to come—as long as you don’t upgrade to a 30-inch display. At 1920x1200 resolution with antialiasing disabled, these cards can run Crysis at 30fps. Boost AA to 4x and you’ll lose just four frames per second in a game that used to bring even the highest-end GPUs to their knees. You’ll fare even better with other titles: Far Cry 2, for example, can easily hit more than 60fps at 1920x1200.
Upgrading to the HD 5850 is a simple decision in other ways, too: It’s 9.5 inches long, so it will fit in any case that housed an 8800 GTX, and you won’t need a new power supply. Lower price, excellent frame rates, and decreased power consumption—what’s not to like?
✔ Hello, DirectX 11 games!
✔ Perfect replacement for the 8800 GTX
Display
Twisted Nematic LCD panels blow. After running through our DisplayMate, Blu-ray, and gaming gauntlet of Lab tests, the TN displays we’ve reviewed retreated with their DVI cables tucked between their legs. So what’s a budget upgrader to do?
If you want our advice—and you do—pick up ViewSonic’s VP2365wb. It’s a 23-inch IPS panel offering 8-bit color depth. It’s equipped with a four-port USB hub and a height-adjustable stand that tilts, rotates, and pivots. And you can find it selling online for about 300 bucks.
This IPS display excelled in our Lab tests.
You will encounter trade-offs: Although it’s marketed as a “professional” monitor, its max resolution is a consumer-ish 1920x1080. It’s dimmer than its pricier competitors, and it doesn’t have an HDMI input. But in Lab tests, we had no problem playing games or movies, and it’s a better photo-editing monitor than any TN display we’ve tested.
✔ In-plane switching display offers superior image and viewing quality
Wi-Fi Router
Belkin has been hit or miss on the router front over the past few years, but its Play router is a definite hit. Here’s a concurrent dual-band 802.11n router (it runs 2.4GHz and 5GHz radios simultaneously) with a virtual guest network, a USB port that can share either a storage device or a printer over the network, and very respectable throughput and range that sells for less than $100.
Belkin's Play router is loaded with high-end features, including two radios and the ability to host a virtual guest network.
The router is self-healing, too. It automatically detects and attempts to resolve network problems, and it will automatically reinitialize itself on a weekly basis (you choose the day and time—or turn off the feature if you don’t like it). If that doesn’t deliver enough value for you, Belkin also throws several applications into the mix. Memory Safe is a utility that runs on your client PCs and automatically backs up whichever directories you designate to an external drive attached to the router. Music Mover is an UPnP- and DLNA-compliant media server. And Daily DJ analyzes your music library and automatically creates playlists based on one of three user-designated moods: High Energy, Steady Groove, or Kick Back. We haven’t used this last feature long enough to have a solid opinion about it, but it wouldn’t detract from this router’s value even it if was unusable.
In fact, there’s just one feature we find wanting on the Play router: It has a four-port 100Mb/s switch, versus a gigabit switch.
✔ Self-healing router
✔ Built-in UPNP/DLNA media server