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Hey everyone -

Lookin for some quick help to make sure I;m not making a glaring error- building a new DAW in the 700 dollar range. I record 16 tracks at the same time at 24/96, and looking for a machine to mix them on effectively, without huge latencies.

PC platform, building around 2 Delta 1010's as my soundcards.

My basic specs will be:
P4 800MHz FSB, ~3 GHz
1Gb of DDR RAM, whatever speed my MoBo takes
SATA drives; 80GB OS drive, 200GB audio drive
basic video card

Questions:
1.) Case recommendations for a minitower?
2.) Should I invest in more RAM?
3.) What are some good power supplies and case fans for fairly quiet operation?
4.) Are there an hard drives that are better than the rest?

Thanks guys -
Let me know if there are any things you wish you had done on your DAW that I can fix from the get-go on mine.

Take care,
Mike

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Comments

Jeemy Tue, 12/21/2004 - 17:13

I've probably been through 200 hard drives in my other job (design agency) and the only brand that never went down on me was Western Digital - Seagate, Maxtor, Fujitsu and all the hifi manufacturers rebrands have all died at some point.

Just my .02 - there could be a million explanations for this, all my fault, but there ya go.

Buy branded memory, Kingston and Crucial are expensive for a reason, if you do this, 1Gb should be ample.

Remember to follow instructions which are downloadable somewhere here I am sure, and perform a proper, clean, minimised install of your OS, run everything else in a seperate OS, preferably running from a 3rd hard drive, ideally in a completely different computer.

No point havin' the hardware right if the software is wasting resources.

I have no idea about quiet power supplies / fans, don't need 'em. Most solid manufacturers quote a dB output though.

Have you considered a UPS unit built in? Might be noisy. Might save your life one day. Up to you,

BEst,

Jamie

Randyman... Tue, 12/21/2004 - 22:44

There are a few guides around. There are quite a few steps that are done once you install the OS and all the essential Drivers. Some BIOS tweaks and Service Disabling are included. Essentially, you kill ANYTHING you don't absloutely need, and optimize what's left for Audio.

About the Fans - I recommend running as many fans as you can - this way you can have slower and quieter fans doing the same work as fewer fans running at full tilt. You can get a fan speed controller to slow them down, or build your own. Some MoBo's already have temperature-proportional fan speed built-in (adjustable within BIOS).

LARGER fans move more air at full speed, or run a large fan at slow speed and get the same air as a smaller fan with much less noise. 120mm fans make good case fans if you can fit them properly.

For a KILLER 478 HeatSink / Fan - Check out ThermalTake's SLK-947U or newer equivalent. Add a 90mm fan, and good to go! KILLER cooling ability.

My Enermax 460Watt PS is VERY quiet, and uses 2 fans at inaudible speeds to help suck air from the case out the back of the PS (lessening the need for extreme case cooling, too). Here is a link http://www.newegg.com/app/ViewProductDesc.asp?description=17-103-488&depa=0 (I LOVE NewEgg.com. 2 Complete Systems and counting!)

:cool:

Reggie Wed, 12/22/2004 - 06:45

Here's my humble opinion:

It is my experience that WinXP is pretty good from the get-go if you do a fresh install. The stuff that mucks it up is unneccessary programs (and unneccessary double consonants?), and internet junk. If you need to sqeeze every bit of juice out of your CPU, http://www.blackviper.com has some well laid out instructions on tweaking.

For cases/PS, Antec makes some pretty good stuff. I have one of their True430 power supplies w/2 fans and it, well, powers stuff. The only problem I had was that I had to mangle my stupid Dell Dimension 8300 case to fit it in. The metal housing was made to only hold the Dell-supplied PS apparantly, so I had to do some cuttin'. Sucked! :D Oh, and I can barely shut the stupid case now because of all the extra cables(which is a good thing) from the PS for powering an unreasonable amount of drives, fans, etc.

If you can afford more Ram, can't hurt. Or you can always upgrade later. I don't have the fancy RAM, but I have no problems to complain about.

Hard Drives with 8MB cache are recommended. I have a WD and a Seagate w/ no problems.

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