What is this?

It is an SSD, but unlike more standard drives it connects to the PC via the PCI-Express bus (instead of SATA) and the NAND memory chips are setup in an internal RAID array. This array means the performance is fantastic (like hooking up several standard SATA SSDs and running them in a raid array). However, the downside of RAID with SSDs is that the TRIM command currently does work - so these drives do tend to lose performance over time.
 
I don't know how many shops sell - but from my experience with other PC enthusiasts on this forum they aren't that popular. This is because they are very expensive for the capacity they offer and the lack of TRIM is a worry for many users who just want a drive to run at the full speed for a long time without much hassle. Also, the use a PCI-E x4 slot - so reducing you options for adding other PCI-E cards (like graphics and sound cards).

Therefore, most users go for standard SATA SSDs like this one. They don't offer quite the same RAW performance, but they are still lightning quick, better value and work with the TRIM command.
 
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Tempting, but the lack of TRIM support worries me!

Plus can you spare a pci slot/fit the card in? If not perhaps just RAID up two sata 3 ssd's!
 
To be honest, If I was building an ultimate system I would not go with one of those cards. Instead I would either go with a fast single SSD or go with a couple of fast standard SATA3 drives (like the M4 one I linked to above or an Intel 520) and run them in RAID0. This would yield similar performance to the revodrive, but offer better reliability (as Crucial and Intel have much better repuations for SSD reliability than OCZ - see here) and it wouldn't use up a PCI-E x4 slot - since I wouldn't want to use up a valuable PCI-E slot on an ultimate machine since I would want to install at least two graphics cards and a sound card.

This is just an excercise, right- not a £4k system you plan to build?
 
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Product Name Qty Price Line Total
Intel Core i7-3960X 3.30GHz (Sandybridge-E) Socket LGA2011 Processor - Retail £779.99
(£649.99) £779.99
(£649.99)
OcUK Tech Lab H2O Radeon HD 7970 3072MB GDDR5 [MSI R7970-2PMD3GD5] £649.94
(£541.62) £1,299.88
(£1,083.24)
OCZ RevoDrive3 X2 240GB PCI-E SSD - (RVD3X2-FHPX4-240G) £569.99
(£474.99) £569.99
(£474.99)
Hazro HZ27WD 10-Bit 27" LED Widescreen Professional Monitor - Black £499.99
(£416.66) £499.99
(£416.66)
Asus Rampage IV Extreme/BF3 Intel X79 (Socket 2011) DDR3 Motherboard £399.98
(£333.32) £399.98
(£333.32)
Cooler Master Cosmos II Ultra Tower Case - Black £339.98
(£283.32) £339.98
(£283.32)
Team Xtreem 16GB (4x4GB) DDR3 PC3-20800C10 2600MHz Dual/Quad Channel Kit £299.99
(£249.99) £299.99
(£249.99)
OcUK Tech Lab - V12 Watercooling Kit 360 **2011 Compatible** £279.98
(£233.32) £279.98
(£233.32)
XFX 1000W Black Edition Pro '80+ Platinum' Certified Modular Power Supply £224.99
(£187.49) £224.99
(£187.49)
Corsair Gaming Audio Series SP2500 High-Power 2.1 PC Speaker System - 232 Watts RMS £181.99
(£151.66) £181.99
(£151.66)
Creative Sound Blaster X-Fi Titanium - Fatal1ty Champion Series 7.1 Sound Card (70SB088600005) £159.98
(£133.32) £159.98
(£133.32)
Razer Naga Epic Elite Wireless MMO 5600DPI Gaming Mouse £116.99
(£97.49) £116.99
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Logitech G19 Gaming Keyboard (920-000978) £109.99
(£91.66) £109.99
(£91.66)
Microsoft Windows 7 Home Premium Upgrade DVD - 32/64bit Retail (GFC-00026) £89.99
(£74.99) £89.99
(£74.99)
LG BH10LS38 10x BluRay-RW / 16 x DVD±RW Lightscribe Drive - Black (OEM) £69.98
(£58.32) £69.98
(£58.32)
Bigfoot Killer 2100 Gigabit Gaming Network Card £64.98
(£54.15) £64.98
(£54.15)
Lamptron FC Touch Fan Controller - Black £49.99
(£41.66) £49.99
(£41.66)
Acousti AcoustiPack ULTIMATE Triple-Layer Material Kit £35.99
(£29.99) £35.99
(£29.99)
Kaspersky Anti-Virus 2012 - Retail - 1 User [KL1143UBAFS] £22.98
(£19.15) £22.98
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Akasa Hard Drive Dampener 3.5" - 5.25" Conversion £6.98
(£5.82) £6.98
(£5.82)
Acousti Anti-vibration 92mm Fan Gasket £3.98
(£3.32) £3.98
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Akasa AK-MX002 PSU and Fan Noise reduction Kit £3.98
(£3.32) £7.96
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Ah, a real system.

In that case, may I ask what you will mainly be using it for?

Also, please bear in mind that in the next 2-3 months the new Intel Ivy Bridge 22nm CPUs/motherboards and Nvidia Kepler Graphics cards will be released - so these new components will likely greatly change any build spec you may create now.
 
I'm In my 2nd year of studying 3D animation so rendering can take days on end, I also game lots hehe. This pc will hopefully last me the next 3-4 years.
 
Ah, fair enough. Then I guess a hex core CPU like the one you picked is a good choice, though I would certainly overclock it to get the most out of it.

May I ask what application you use for your animation? I ask because many of these packages are now making use of the immense parallel power of modern graphics cards.

There are a few things I would suggest changing with your spec:

- Go with a graphics card with a standard heatsink+fan cooler - the watercooling kit you went for is nice - but I wouldn't trust it cooling two 220W graphics cards and a 130W CPU. If you are going for 7970s then I would go with this card (because gigabyte have a good warranty).

- Switch to one or two standard SATA3 SSDs like this. As these will be more reliable and not use up precious PCIE slots.

- The ASUS Rampage 4 Extreme board is a nice one, but it is very expensive. You could save a lot of money and get a board almost as good (like this one).

- That RAM is MAD expensive. Seriously, don't buy it. You can get a nice 1600MHz 16GB (4x4GB) kit for £75 and as you can see here - the real-world performance difference between a 1600MHz and a 2400MHz kit is pretty tiny (plus it is unlikely you will be able to get the CPU to actually run the kit at 2600MHz). Instead you would probably be better off buying two of those kingston kits for £150 total and that will give you 32GB of system RAM - which should be plenty no matter what you throw at it.

- You may want to consider going for a mechanical keyboard over the G19. The G19 does have a nice screen, but mechanical boards have far superior switches which feel much nicer to work on. Here is some more info on mechanical keyboards if you are interested.

- You will need to go with a different version of the OS for two reasons. 1) that is the upgrade edition, best going for the OEM versions - or the full retail version if you think you may change motherboards and reuse the OS. Also home premium only supports up to 16GB total memory - so 16GB of system RAM + a 3GB graphics card will take you over this limit - meaning that you can only address 13GB of your system memory. To get round this you need to go for the professional version of windows 7 64bit - as this supports up to 192GB of memory.

- The bigfoot network card looks nice, but it is nigh-on useless for improving gaming performance. Best just using the Intel Gigabit ethernet port included on any of the X79 motherboards.

- Go for the i7 3930X CPU instead of the 3960X - it is much cheaper and basically the same chip with a slightly lower initial clockspeed. However, this makes no difference if you plan to overclock and these chips both clock the same.

Hope some of that info is of use.
 
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What about storage Hard Drives ?
If you want a Blu-ray drive get the retail version, it comes with the software which you can't get freely ;)
 
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