scotty78 Publish time 2-12-2019 03:51:49

Repair or replace

Hi I have been out of the loop with computers for quite some time. My current pc broke about 10 months ago and now I want to repair or replace it. I had built it a couple of years earlier but I haven't kept up with pc components at all and I would like some advice if I should repair the hardware that I have or if I should sell my working components and just build a full new system. I had initially thought my psu was at fault and bought a new one at Xmas, however it seems that my psu was fine and the motherboard must be the issue.

I don't mind spending about £300 on a repair and I would spend £300 plus whatever I sell my current components for if I was doing a new build.

I don't play games on my system its more an htpc and I like to use kodi or view files that I have on my hard drives. Not sure how much 4k content is available at the minute but I do have a 4k tv that I will use as my monitor. Part of me thinks 1080p would be sufficient.

Last question is if I replace the motherboard or rebuild the system would I be able to just plug my multiple storage hard drives in and the system would see them or am I likely to lose all the content on my hard drives?

The items I have at the minute are as follows:

htpc case
2500k cpu
asus p8p67 pro motherboard (assuming faulty though does still light up but doesn't post)
G skill 8gb ddr3 12800
GTX 460 1024mb graphics card
SanDisk 240gb SSD sata 6gb's
EVGA 650 GQ psu (new)
Corsiar HX520 psu
7 Hard drives around 18TB

Thank you for any advice

EndlessWaves Publish time 2-12-2019 03:51:50

You'd only lose access if they're encrypted or otherwise set up in a way that ties them to your current hardware (e.g. motherboard RAID).

If they're just set up as normal drives they'll be fine.

That's a 2011 system so at this point I would be tempted to say sell off the computing bits and replace them with new. The case, power supply and drives can be kept.

A ~£400 system isn't going to have much, if any, reduction in raw power and you get all the latest capabilities like 4K Playback, DRM support and output.

scotty78 Publish time 2-12-2019 03:51:51

Thank you for the reply, that's good news about my storage drives. Can you recommend me a motherboard, cpu and ram combo?or even point me in the right direction. Would ryzen be the way to go over intel?

dollag Publish time 2-12-2019 03:51:52

I just sold off my 2700k build recently and replaced with a more up to date pc and actually got some decent returns on the cpu and ram.

I bought the latest hardware so hopefully keep me going for another 8 years or so but it wasn’t cheap.

It depends on what you want to use the machine for?

scotty78 Publish time 2-12-2019 03:51:53

What did you replace it with? my htpc was in a dedicated cinema room but I sold my pj around a year ago and replaced it with a 65" hisense uhd tv. Tbh its not been the best year so my pc has been sitting in bits for 10 months and I have never really used the tv despite it being the best one in the house. The amp in the room isn't capable of 4k its a 1080p amp that can do hd sound but I just connected my pc via optical.

My pc is just used for surfing the net and for mainly kodi or media portal. I half considered just buying a z77 motherboard just to get it up and running (assuming its my motherboard at fault) but as you say maybe its time to bite the bullet and go for a new system. I don't encode or anything so mainly its just for watching media.

dollag Publish time 2-12-2019 03:51:53

I replaced it due to 4K transcoding and playback.

Like you it’s usually used for media.

I kept my existing drives as already had an ssd for my main drive.

I ended up getting a 8700k, z370 mb, 16gb ddr4 ram as I also wanted to start gaming on my pc rather than a ps.

An i5 8400, mb and 8gb ddr4 ram should be had for circa £350 and yield fantastic results for a media pc

scotty78 Publish time 2-12-2019 03:51:53

Excellent thanks for the advice. Onboard graphics is sufficient nowadays?

dollag Publish time 2-12-2019 03:51:54

For 4K media yes but not for games. I have a 1070ti also but that alone was expensive

Saul Goodman Publish time 2-12-2019 03:51:54

A 2500k cpu is absolutely fine for a htpc if you buy at least a 1050ti GC.

I know because I still use my 2011 2500k along side a 1080ti for madvr upscaling.

EndlessWaves Publish time 2-12-2019 03:51:54

Yeah, Intel CPU costs have risen considerably over the last few months - apparently due to shortages - so something like a Ryzen 2200G is the way to go at the moment. The 8400 suggested above is now £280 alone, so you wouldn't get one with ram and a motherboard on a £350 budget.

What do you need from the motherboard? Presumably HDMI 2.0 and 8 SATA ports, anything else?
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