Question Help with a new pc build under $1,000

Dfish21

Junior Member
Oct 8, 2024
8
1
36
I’m looking to build a pc for the first time in over ten years and everything is new to me again. If someone could look this over and tell me if it’s a good setup, I would appreciate it.

CPU- AMD ryzen 5 5600x (stock cooler)
Motherboard- ASUS prime b550m w/wifi
Ram- silicon power 16gb ddr4
Storage- silicon power 2tb ud90
Gpu- gigabyte Radeon rx 7700 xt
Psu- Corsair rm750e
Case- montech air 903 max

My old pc has an EVGA supernova 850 b2. I assume I shouldn’t reuse that given its age, but I figured I’d ask in case I can save $100.

The total comes out to right around $930. Any suggestions as to what can be optimized or if anything is over the top here?
 

In2Photos

Platinum Member
Mar 21, 2007
2,024
2,052
136
I don't see anything outrageous. What speed and CL is the RAM? I'd probably try to go with 32gb of RAM if you can squeeze it and maybe a better tier PSU. You could use your old PSU but I would consider upgrading it at some point soon down the road just to be safe.

Did you use PC Part Picker to put your build together?
 
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Dfish21

Junior Member
Oct 8, 2024
8
1
36
I don't see anything outrageous. What speed and CL is the RAM? I'd probably try to go with 32gb of RAM if you can squeeze it and maybe a better tier PSU. You could use your old PSU but I would consider upgrading it at some point soon down the road just to be safe.

Did you use PC Part Picker to put your build together?
I did use pc parts picker and then researched the individual parts to be safe. The speed of the ram is 3200mhz and cl16. I did look the corsair rm750 up and I believe it said it was in a or b tier, would this not be considered ok for the build? I appreciate the help! I should also mention that I have a newer 1080p monitor and don’t plan on upgrading that until I eventually build my son’s first pc. He only cares about Minecraft atm so his build will be less expensive.
 

In2Photos

Platinum Member
Mar 21, 2007
2,024
2,052
136
I did use pc parts picker and then researched the individual parts to be safe. The speed of the ram is 3200mhz and cl16. I did look the corsair rm750 up and I believe it said it was in a or b tier, would this not be considered ok for the build? I appreciate the help! I should also mention that I have a newer 1080p monitor and don’t plan on upgrading that until I eventually build my son’s first pc. He only cares about Minecraft atm so his build will be less expensive.
You're right the RM750e is tier A. For some reason I thought it was a tier B.

Even though you only plan to play 1080p getting the best system for the money right now means you don't have to change any parts if you go 1440p or pick up any newer games that are more demanding. The system in the video uses AM5 which is the current platform over AM4 and also has a GPU one step up from the one in your list, all for roughly the same price. It does use a CPU from AliExpress and an open box motherboard as well as only 1tb of storage but has 32gb of RAM and probably better overall value. But either build would be good.
 
Reactions: Dfish21

Dfish21

Junior Member
Oct 8, 2024
8
1
36
You're right the RM750e is tier A. For some reason I thought it was a tier B.

Even though you only plan to play 1080p getting the best system for the money right now means you don't have to change any parts if you go 1440p or pick up any newer games that are more demanding. The system in the video uses AM5 which is the current platform over AM4 and also has a GPU one step up from the one in your list, all for roughly the same price. It does use a CPU from AliExpress and an open box motherboard as well as only 1tb of storage but has 32gb of RAM and probably better overall value. But either build would be good.
I watched the video, and honestly, I’ve been wondering about making small concessions to jump to the newest hardware anyways. It doesn’t seem worth it, to go a generation behind just, to save around $100 and I can live with 1tb instead of 2. Can I still stick with the same gpu or is it not worth the $70-$80 in savings? I’m not trying to seem like a miser, but I also need to buy a new desk and peripherals as well, so I’m just trying to save where I can.
I’ve just been looking at the huge jump I’ll be making from my 10 year old rig.

Again I do appreciate you taking time to help!
 

In2Photos

Platinum Member
Mar 21, 2007
2,024
2,052
136
I watched the video, and honestly, I’ve been wondering about making small concessions to jump to the newest hardware anyways. It doesn’t seem worth it, to go a generation behind just, to save around $100 and I can live with 1tb instead of 2. Can I still stick with the same gpu or is it not worth the $70-$80 in savings? I’m not trying to seem like a miser, but I also need to buy a new desk and peripherals as well, so I’m just trying to save where I can.
I’ve just been looking at the huge jump I’ll be making from my 10 year old rig.

Again I do appreciate you taking time to help!
I was in the same boat as you. My previous build was from 2009 except for some upgrades along the way like more RAM, a newer GPU and SSD. I didn't have a budget per se when I built mine last year and I wanted a certain aesthetic that cost me extra. The difference in performance is huge compared to the older PC.

The 7800XT is about 10-20% faster than the 7700XT, but also has more vram, 16gb vs 12gb, so it can hold up better with more demanding titles in the future or with higher resolution. You also may be able to find a 6800 or 6800 XT for a decent deal.

Again I don't think either choice is bad. If you have a budget to stick to buy the best you can in that price range.

7500f w/7800 XT, 2TB, 32GB RAM for $1000.

 

mikeymikec

Lifer
May 19, 2011
18,654
11,410
136
If the 5600x is anything like the 7600, I'd consider the stock cooler to be woefully inadequate (CPU saturation with the stock cooler equals sky-high temps within a matter of seconds).

While recent generations of non-low-end x86 CPUs are designed to turbo as much as they can and only reign in the turbo frequencies if they're nearing the thermal ceiling so therefore it's logical to expect that any cooling solution is going to get well-tested, I would guess that a 5600x with the stock cooler would be allowed to reach maybe 75% of its full potential while under a full sustained load.

Here's a thread talking about the 5600 (non X) and the wraith stealth cooler not being enough:

IMO if you're working within a tight budget you can probably grin and bear the stock cooler for a bit, you'll probably notice the CPU fan audibly reving up with the slightest provocation (e.g. web browsing), but I think even a small step up to a budget tower-style cooler (e.g. Be Quiet! Pure Rock 2 Slim, but preferably a PR2) would result in significantly reduced noise levels and a performance improvement.

Btw I assume you're gaming? The 7700X strongly implies it but I thought I'd check!

I have misgivings about limiting yourself to the older generation and not making the most of the older generation (ie. an X3D CPU), but a budget is a budget I guess. I suppose you might be able to pick up a second-hand X3D AM4 CPU cheaply in the years to come.
 

Dfish21

Junior Member
Oct 8, 2024
8
1
36
I was in the same boat as you. My previous build was from 2009 except for some upgrades along the way like more RAM, a newer GPU and SSD. I didn't have a budget per se when I built mine last year and I wanted a certain aesthetic that cost me extra. The difference in performance is huge compared to the older PC.

The 7800XT is about 10-20% faster than the 7700XT, but also has more vram, 16gb vs 12gb, so it can hold up better with more demanding titles in the future or with higher resolution. You also may be able to find a 6800 or 6800 XT for a decent deal.

Again I don't think either choice is bad. If you have a budget to stick to buy the best you can in that price range.

7500f w/7800 XT, 2TB, 32GB RAM for $1000.

This is super helpful thank you! It’s still going to be a couple months before I get it all built and setup, but I’ll be sure to come back here and post the final setup. My furniture is all cherry wood, so I’m thinking a black/soft orange build to fit.
 

In2Photos

Platinum Member
Mar 21, 2007
2,024
2,052
136
For gaming the stock cooler will work ok, but I do agree even a $20 cooler like the ID Cooling SE-214 would be better. Hardware Canucks found very little performance difference in different coolers for the 7600X in gaming.

 
Reactions: Dfish21

Dfish21

Junior Member
Oct 8, 2024
8
1
36
I was in the same boat as you. My previous build was from 2009 except for some upgrades along the way like more RAM, a newer GPU and SSD. I didn't have a budget per se when I built mine last year and I wanted a certain aesthetic that cost me extra. The difference in performance is huge compared to the older PC.

The 7800XT is about 10-20% faster than the 7700XT, but also has more vram, 16gb vs 12gb, so it can hold up better with more demanding titles in the future or with higher resolution. You also may be able to find a 6800 or 6800 XT for a decent deal.

Again I don't think either choice is bad. If you have a budget to stick to buy the best you can in that price range.

7500f w/7800 XT, 2TB, 32GB RAM for $1000.

This is super helpful thank you! It’s still going to be a couple months before I get it all built and setup, but I’ll be sure to come back here and post the final setup. My furniture is all cherry wood, so I’m thinking a black/soft orange build to fit
 

Dfish21

Junior Member
Oct 8, 2024
8
1
36
If the 5600x is anything like the 7600, I'd consider the stock cooler to be woefully inadequate (CPU saturation with the stock cooler equals sky-high temps within a matter of seconds).

While recent generations of non-low-end x86 CPUs are designed to turbo as much as they can and only reign in the turbo frequencies if they're nearing the thermal ceiling so therefore it's logical to expect that any cooling solution is going to get well-tested, I would guess that a 5600x with the stock cooler would be allowed to reach maybe 75% of its full potential while under a full sustained load.

Here's a thread talking about the 5600 (non X) and the wraith stealth cooler not being enough:

IMO if you're working within a tight budget you can probably grin and bear the stock cooler for a bit, you'll probably notice the CPU fan audibly reving up with the slightest provocation (e.g. web browsing), but I think even a small step up to a budget tower-style cooler (e.g. Be Quiet! Pure Rock 2 Slim, but preferably a PR2) would result in significantly reduced noise levels and a performance improvement.

Btw I assume you're gaming? The 7700X strongly implies it but I thought I'd check!

I have misgivings about limiting yourself to the older generation and not making the most of the older generation (ie. an X3D CPU), but a budget is a budget I guess. I suppose you might be able to pick up a second-hand X3D AM4 CPU cheaply in the years to come.
I am definitely planning to game, I’ve definitely been thinking whether going with the older generation is really worth it when the difference will only be around $100-$200. The budget is flexible, honestly mostly limited by my inability to buy things for myself. At the end of the day if the stock coolers aren’t a good idea I’d rather play it safe, and spend a bit more money for more longevity. You guys have been great, thank you so much!
 

manly

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
11,895
2,843
136
Welcome to the forums.
Add $120 to your budget and build something around AM5. Is your timetable more like right away, or Black Friday? BF should have some better deals (i.e. Newegg bundle).

If you want to buy the PSU now, the excellent RM750x SHIFT is on sale (I see it's on In2Photos's build list):

 
Reactions: In2Photos

In2Photos

Platinum Member
Mar 21, 2007
2,024
2,052
136
This is super helpful thank you! It’s still going to be a couple months before I get it all built and setup, but I’ll be sure to come back here and post the final setup. My furniture is all cherry wood, so I’m thinking a black/soft orange build to fit
Lian Li just came out with a new case that's getting great reviews and I think it's $79 and includes fans. The lancool 207.
 
Reactions: Dfish21

Dfish21

Junior Member
Oct 8, 2024
8
1
36
Welcome to the forums.
Add $120 to your budget and build something around AM5. Is your timetable more like right away, or Black Friday? BF should have some better deals (i.e. Newegg bundle).

If you want to buy the PSU now, the excellent RM750x SHIFT is on sale (I see it's on In2Photos's build list):

I was planning to wait a couple months before I started the build actually. I completely forgot about Black Friday. I figured I’d keep an eye out for the time being and buy single components if I could find sales on them.
 

manly

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
11,895
2,843
136
I was planning to wait a couple months before I started the build actually. I completely forgot about Black Friday. I figured I’d keep an eye out for the time being and buy single components if I could find sales on them.
One thing I'll say about the Newegg DIY bundles is they don't seem to last long. Sometimes a few hours and they're out of stock.

If past history holds up, Black Friday will indeed be a good time to place your orders. You can buy the RM750x PSU now if you'd like, but you run the small risk that if it's DOA you won't know until 2 months later and will have to RMA the thing with Corsair. So usually it's advisable to buy everything within about a 2 week window to get all your ducks lined up in a row for the build. And you can easily return stuff to Amazon/Newegg if necessary.
 

manly

Lifer
Jan 25, 2000
11,895
2,843
136
At a glance, this is not a bad deal although you'll want to buy a 2TB SSD for large games.


Reading the thread, you have to apply a coupon code and they're tossing in a second RAM kit too.

We think you have some superior options if you're willing to stretch your budget to $1100 + tax.
But if someone wants a cheap 1080p gaming build for well under $1000 grand total, this bundle looks good to me.
 
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