Build a PC: Blueprints (November 2012)



The Performance build undergoes extremely light modifications this month as there hasn’t been a lot of new hardware introduced, and to be honest, this rig is already pretty bitchin’. We’re sticking with our Sandy Bridge-E Core i7-3820, 16GB of Corsair RAM, and our Asus GeForce GTX 670 GPU as it makes for a potent package, and represents the perfect middle ground between Baseline and Ultra. We have upgraded our SSD to the 256GB 830 model from Samsung, however, as its dollar-to-gigabyte ratio has dropped down to around $0.75, and let’s be honest—a 128GB boot drive is barely cutting it these days.



Since we dished on the parts required for a budget build last month, this month we’ve brought back the Ultra configuration a towering hulk of a PC designed to shred benchmarks and your line of credit. The Ultra configuration is about two stages below Dream Machine in that its budget is still “real world,” yet it is built using the best components available in every category.
The six-core Intel Core i7-3930K is running the show with a Corsair H100 water cooler keeping it frosty even at 4.8GHz overclocked. A modest 16GB of RAM from Corsair has found a cozy home in the Asus P9X79 motherboard, which is great for overclocking and will accommodate another GTX 690 if we ever need to play Crysis 3 on three displays at once. On the storage front, we’re sticking with 6TB of 7,200rpm storage for data and backup, and have upgraded our boot drive to the new 256GB Samsung 840 Series Pro SSD, which set seven out of nine benchmark records in the Lab this month. We also switched our LG Blu-ray drive in favor of a Lite-On model, but the writing is on the wall for physical media so we’ll probably remove this category soon. Finally, we’re sticking with Windows 7 Pro for now even though Windows 8 has arrived. We’ll definitely upgrade at some point, but probably not until SP1 arrives.