Pre or Self Build

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Hello peeps

My dads looking for a new work pc so I've been having a look and wondered if it would be better/cheaper to build one rather than buy ready made

His only requirements are windows 7, be fairly quiet and run at a decent speed

Its used for email, office programs, youtube/iplayer, bit of solitaire etc, so nothing taxing.

Max budget £400

Hopefully you guys have some good suggestions :D
 
Self build almost always works out cheaper & better.

You could probably just get a motherboard with onboard graphics since he won't be playing any intensive games.

GFX card is normally the most expensive part of a build so, you will be able to get a really fast pc for £400 if it doesn't need to play games!

I'm not great at specing, but I'm sure someone else will swing by and post the best you can get for your money :)!
 
Self building gives you the satisfaction of building it yourself, as well as being cheaper for the most part. Getting it pre-built however can save you the trouble of doing it.
 
Does he need OS, monitor, peripherals, etc?

Just base:


That should last a number of years + upgradable.
 
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For myself i would always self build, for someone else I'd have to consider whether I wanted to be bothered with every tech-support query they have for the rest of the life of the thing,
 
That depends, the only other person I have built a PC for was my parents and I was tech support for them anyway.

Pre or self build is one main thing for me: Price. At the low end of the market it is possible to get pre built systems cheaper than if you built the same system. The other factor is ofcourse, can you get a pre built at the spec you want?
 
If you are living not far from your parents and are willing to do ALL the tech support, the sefl build is the best option price wise. Now if you do live far away from your parents' home and that you still need to do the tech support for them, a pre built with warranty is your best friend.

I had to explain how to get a floppy disk out that was containing memtest from the machine I left my parents back in 2004: "yes while the machine is off", "No it is on the front and you need to push the button next to the slide", "Please ask dad when he is coming back to have a look". They now have an HP laptop bought from a retailer like PCWorld and have a 2 years on site support.

A laptop like this Samsung R730 17.3" LED Intel Dual Core T4300, 4GB RAM, 320GB HDD, DVD-RW, Win7 Home Premium should do fine in your price range considering the expected usage.

I hope this help.

Tam
 
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Thanks for all the replies!

Does he need OS, monitor, peripherals, etc?

Just base:


That should last a number of years + upgradable.

That spec looks perfect, hes got all the above so will probably go for this! :D

If you are living not far from your parents and are willing to do ALL the tech support, the sefl build is the best option price wise.
Tam

Still live with parents so that won't be a problem, he prefers a big screen for home use so laptop isn't suitable but thanks anyway!
 
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I'd get a Pentium G6950 over an i3.
Really nothing in it - except the Pentium will overclock further :p- and the pentium is cheaper.

If you're really looking for cheap as cheap, AMD Sempron or Athlon II is worth looking at, LGA775 is another possibility.
 
Sure you've probably already got it covered but if not I'd certainly spend the rest of the £400 on a decent external usb hd. Even these days its amazing how many folks keep important work or private files at home on pc but have no back-up strategy whatsoever. Nowadays with external hd's being so cheap there really is no excuse. Strangely I find its usually the folks who spend a fortune on home contents insurance but totally forget that there is no such things as new for old when it comes to data.
 
Hi
Just go out and get a lap top, less problems if you have not built a PC before, there are many sub £400 ones on the market and for what you will use it for you have the piece and mind of a manufactures warranty.

Alan
 
Hi
Just go out and get a lap top, less problems if you have not built a PC before, there are many sub £400 ones on the market and for what you will use it for you have the piece and mind of a manufactures warranty.

Alan

Still live with parents so that won't be a problem, he prefers a big screen for home use so laptop isn't suitable but thanks anyway!

Read posts :p
 
From my own personal experience of building PCs for my dads works I've found that it's not always cheaper to self build. If you're going for the lower end of the power spectrum and only wanting internet and office applications it can sometimes be cheaper and more convenient just to get a pre build. Anything more taxing than that which maybe requires a more powerful graphics card of CPU then suddenly self build is the best. For £400 you really want windows and a monitor to be included in that price.

Also you can plug a laptop into a big screen and use that as the monitor, so a laptop might still be viable.
 
From my own personal experience of building PCs for my dads works I've found that it's not always cheaper to self build. If you're going for the lower end of the power spectrum and only wanting internet and office applications it can sometimes be cheaper and more convenient just to get a pre build. Anything more taxing than that which maybe requires a more powerful graphics card of CPU then suddenly self build is the best. For £400 you really want windows and a monitor to be included in that price.

Also you can plug a laptop into a big screen and use that as the monitor, so a laptop might still be viable.

Its not just the screen size, he tends to manhandle laptops so I'd rather get him something he isn't going to move :p
 
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Hes a solicitor so only really ...

Wait, what?

He's a solicitor and wants a £400 PC to rely on his data being safe and secure? :eek: Thats what, 3 hours work at most?

Utter, utter madness. Get a decent spec pre-built machine with a warranty, and look into a home or small business NAS with RAID storage. I'm no storage guru but RAID 4 or 5 at least, on a mirrored array.

If your home HDD goes down, you'll be a bit unhappy, lose some game saves, possibly some photos if you're unlucky enough not to have backed them up lately.

If his HDD goes down and is irrecoverable, how much work would he lose? How much would that cost a client? How big is the negligence lawsuit that he'd be facing?
 
Nearly all the important stuff he deals with is paper based. That being said hes got 2 external hard drives so back ups are covered
 
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