Friday 1 August 2014

How To Build A PC: From Component Selection To Installation

How To Build A PC

Many of the people who land on the material Tom are already deeply passionate about technology and Computer hardware. But we know that others seek to learn more. We are an inclusive group. So if you've never built your own PC, do not be afraid. Our editorial team does it all the time, and we are happy to guide you through the steps, starting with the right parts.

There is a good chance that even if you have not received your dirty hands inside a case, you still have a basic understanding of the components that go inside. Experienced builders often have their ideal configuration in mind before choosing a case. But even a seasoned professional to be sure everything is to fit inside the frame on the right. And of course, envelopes vary depending on what you want to do with your PC. Home theater systems, the all-in-one boxes flashy game and workstations business focused all have their own requirements.

Traditional case following size categories below. However, more modern designs tend to diverge from those defined in the name of differentiation standards. Mid-tower designs, for example, are now in almost full scale tower. To make matters more confusing, they can even be called tricks of its own, even if they do not have the drive bays inside that used to define the form factor.



Complete revolutions were traditionally large enough to accommodate two power supplies, but many had a second rack hard drive where you would expect to find high power. The interior of a full frame is useful under certain tower configurations; However, most home users (and most fans) just do not have enough material to fill it.




ATX mid towers are usually able to hold the motherboard in full-screen mode, the power supplies in full screen mode, multiple optical drives in full screen mode (DVD and Blu-ray burners), and multiple hard drives. Well-designed units, as Cooler Master Storm Enforcer (above left) are well suited for gamers and video, simply because they support a greater number of expansion cards and disks harder than the smaller units. A comparison of our current cases reviewed models ten years ago show that good ideas to the test of time.

Most cases give you room for seven expansion slots around back. Usually this is enough for a pair of graphics cards, add in the sound, and even rear panel brackets exposing the USB or eSATA connectivity. But let's say you love your games, and you're dead set on building a system with three or four graphics cards. Research specifically on ATX case with eight or more expansion slots may be necessary, since the high-performance cards are thick cooling solutions that use the slot hole of the case for ventilation.

MicroATX mini-tours are almost as versatile as among the towers in applications ranging from office workhorses of high-end liquid cooled monster game SLI hungry because of their less imposing and easier trasportability profile. Mini-tours typically support one or two optical and one or two hard disks drives, and the microATX form factor support up to four expansion slots. All these limitations are acceptable for most users.

Cubes Mini-ITX typically support a single expansion card and the smaller blocks, although little oversized-Lian Li PC-Q08 above (center) supports larger parts supply. Based primarily on the features and integrated functionality, these space-saving speakers were once good as platforms at work and productivity oriented. Now, thanks to the host and graphics more efficient processors, we also have access to machines and ultra-compact home theater consoles games. Although you often see these referred to as "small form factor", the term form factor is better applied to the mini-ITX motherboard found inside. Variations aesthetic cube still support the form factor ATX and microATX.

Once used to raise small CRT to eye level on the dishes offices, for horizontal desktop today are mostly cosmetic changes for home theater systems. They range from game-themed mini-ITX Raven RVZ01 (bottom center of the photo above) for full ATX stands eight inches tall, wearing on their sides. Several thinner models use special expansion cards half-height, although the model shown above uses a right angle adapter (called a riser card) to place a full size graphics card on the side. If the expansion is important to you, beware of models that use a supply custom size, as those can not be upgraded.

You want something smaller? The yellow box above the most compact we've tested to really be considered a performance-oriented engine unit. Called the Brix Pro, it holds two modules notebook memory size, an edge on mSATA SSD and a 2.5 "laptop. Courtes units are available with single-drive performance even scaled and Intel even jumped on the bandwagon with its small NUC (Next Unit [of] Computing) apparently similar form factor. most of these machines are available either as a barebones system (no disks or memory) or a complete PC, and all use power adapters, notebook external style.


How To Build A PC: From Component Selection To Installation

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