Entry Level System Summary


 Hardware  Component  Price
CPU & Cooling AMD Athlon XP 2000+ (cooling included) $57
Motherboard ASUS A7N8X-X (nForce2 400) $69
Memory 1 X 256MB Kingston ValueRAM $50
Video Card 64MB Sapphire Radeon 9200SE $43
Monitor Samsung SyncMaster 17" Flat-Tube (model 763MB) $150
Computer Case CaseEdge TS1 Mid Tower plus 300W PSU $61
Sound Card Onboard sound $0
Speakers Creative Labs SBS270 2.0 speakers $20
Networking Onboard 10/100 Ethernet $0
Hard Drive Western Digital 400BB (40GB) $57
CD-RW Sony 52x32x52 CD-RW $31
Bottom Line - $538

$538 is the final price of this week's entry level system, not including any money that you'll spend on software (Windows XP Home or Professional, Office, etc.) or a keyboard and mouse.

The bang-for-the-buck that you get with this system is quite impressive. All components were tested right here at AnandTech with these exact specifications, with everything working beautifully. Factor in excellent performance for the money and a 3-year warranty on parts such as the CPU and hard drive, and you've got yourself quite the complete system. The major alternative picks that will make the biggest difference in your daily usage include the faster 2500+ CPU, faster and larger hard drive, and better graphics performance, all for minimal price increases. We suggest that you consider the alternative picks seriously.

Now, go build your system and let us know what you think in our comments section.

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  • Duker - Thursday, June 10, 2004 - link

    Better card for a few more $$$.

    http://www.newegg.com/app/ViewProductDesc.asp?desc...
  • Duker - Thursday, June 10, 2004 - link

    Why don't you recommend a 128 bit 128 meg GeForce FX5200 for $63.00? Far Cry would laugh at that 64 Meg 64 bit ATI 9200SE and Doom 3 is closing fast. I don't think ATI is a good choice for this system and I use ATI in 3 out of 4 of my personal machines. Is ATI paying you?

    http://www.newegg.com/app/ViewProductDesc.asp?desc...
  • White Widow - Thursday, June 10, 2004 - link

    Ditto on the support for the 80GB drive. If a company is really going to buy 1000 PC's, then they could probably negotiate some volume pricing anyway.

    As for overall system pricing, I think the budget system should be kept as close to $500 as possible. If you are building an internet/MS Office machine for someone, that $500 price point stands out.

    I also agree that the Overclocking System (is there still an Overclocking System Guide??) should NOT be the most expensive, but rather the most bang-for-the-buck. I see such a system pricing out toward the top end of a Mid-Range system.

    Finally, AT has GOT to fix the Price Guide. I'm not ure how it is coded, but most sections of the Buyers Guide discuss two compnents, but onlylist prices for one. How hard can it be to list prices for both CPU's and Motherboards together?
  • Apologiliac - Wednesday, June 9, 2004 - link

    CC had a sale for a 120 GB WD 7200rpm for $60!
  • nastyemu25 - Wednesday, June 9, 2004 - link

    i'm starting to hate that case
  • kristof007 - Wednesday, June 9, 2004 - link

    Is it jst me or there is no overclocking system anymore ?
  • TrogdorJW - Wednesday, June 9, 2004 - link

    Two major issues that continue to plague the low-end system. First is that hard drive recommendation. If a large corporation is buying a bunch of computers, $10 times 1000 is going to be noticeable. For anyone else, you might as well just go with the 80GB drive and be done with it. Volume levels of the WD drives leave something to be desired, though.

    The other issue is the RAM. You increase the CPU and motherboard costs $40 in the alternative recommendations, mostly for people that want decent gaming performance. You increase the graphics $9, again mostly for low-end gamers. You increase the RAM costs $15, but the difference between CAS 2.5 and CAS2.0 RAM with a low-end system sporting 256 MB of RAM is going to be virtually non-existent. How about something more useful like bumping the price up $37 and recommending a 512 MB Mushkin DIMM like this one: http://www.newegg.com/app/ViewProductDesc.asp?desc... Anyone trying even moderate gaming under Windows XP is going to start encountering severe problems with the more recent games running on 256 MB of RAM.

    Finally, that Foxconn case is just fugly. If you're going to recommend that people buy the extra $20 Sparkle power supply for a total of $61 on the case, there are a lot of other options. $72 for the Antec SLK2650-BQE is one option that would only add $11, and you get an Antec 350W PSU instead of a generic 300W PSU. http://www.newegg.com/app/viewproductdesc.asp?desc...

    Since you didn't provide this, let's put it in the comments (and I'll throw in my RAM and case suggestions):

    Alternative Low-to-midrange System:
    Athlon XP 2500+ CPU: $80
    Abit NF7-S: $86
    512 MB PC3200 Mushkin: $87
    Radeon 9200: $52
    17" NEC Monitor: $166
    Antec SLK2650-BQE w/ 350W: $72
    WD 800JB 80GB hard drive: $67
    Lite-On CD-RW/DVD combo: $48
    Creative Speakers: $20
    Integrated audio and network: $0
    --------------------------------
    Total for slightly more expensive - but overall better performing - Low/Mid system: $678

    That took me all of 10 minutes to put those prices together, including finding my alternative RAM and case information. For office use, there's no real need for the alternative, but for low-end gaming, the extra $140 would go a long way toward making the system perform better.
  • gherald - Wednesday, June 9, 2004 - link

    #1 I have to agree $10 more for the WD800JB is definately a better deal.

    The article suggests that "Pushing SATA into the low end mainstream is very important for the development of that technology" so the alternative HD should be the WD800JD or perhaps this equivalent Hitachi:
    http://www.newegg.com/app/ViewProductDesc.asp?desc...
    Of course, you'd need the NF7 motherboard for that.

    #6: The reason is 2D graphics quality; Radeons are much better than onboard Geforces. At work half the stations I administer have Geforce 4 MX's directly on the northbridge and the other half have either a radeon 9x00 or ATI Rage pro 128 card. The differences in quality are clearly noticeable.

    As for prices, #4 is right on the money though I would suggest these approximate price ranges:

    Entry-level: $600 +/- $100
    Mid-range: $1100 +/- $200
    High-end: $2000 +/- $500

    #9 your high end limit is way to high. I'd call more than $2500-3000 an 'uber' system.

    #11 the absolute low limit for high-end is clearly $1500; below is most assuredly in upper-mid-range territory. Also, you are misssing the point of overclocking. Yes many high-end and "luxury" systems (as you call them) can be effectively overclocked, but this does not define an "Overclocking System" per se.

    In my opinion an Overclocking System should be roughly 5 to 15% more expensive than a mid-range one, because they'll need a few quality components like a better PSU, quality motherboard, excellent HSF and PC3500+ memory but their goal is often to get the most bang for the buck. This attitude is clearly exemplified these days by the Mobile Barton / NF7r2 crowd.
  • Pumpkinierre - Wednesday, June 9, 2004 - link

    Suprised to see those Prescott prices:

    2.4E at $123- $35 below 2.4c. making it a low to mid level system chip

    2.8E 533FSB - ~$30 higher than 2.8E 800MHz FSB or 2.8c - crazy, must be the enthusiast/upgrader/o'clocker's P4 of choice.

    the 3.0 and 3.2 are about the same (but with the 533 P4E ahead in price in the 3.0 rank again!). The 3.4E is still $60 ahead of the 3.4c (why? beyond yields, I dont know) and the EEs are'nt coming down in price unfortunately.
  • MDE - Wednesday, June 9, 2004 - link

    You mention that the NF7-S is a.k.a. the AN7, that's not really true, they're different boards, there's a reason Abit didn't name the AN7 the NF7-S 3.0.

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