Author Topic: What's the Perfect Computer Setup for Aces High  (Read 966 times)

Offline whels

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What's the Perfect Computer Setup for Aces High
« Reply #15 on: August 25, 2005, 10:38:45 AM »
Slash,


if u want max AH, the fastest single core u can afford is what u want. AMD FX 55 or 57. if u want to plan for future, then a X2 is what u want, 4400 is the best bang for $  in those right now.
not much out right now for dual core, but will later.

whels

Quote
Originally posted by Slash27
rgr that Krusty.




Cpu - socket 939 Athlon 64. Get the best you can, but an A64 3800 "Venice" or 4000 "San Diego" would be great choices for under $400. Any faster and you'll spend double for 10-20% speedup.



eagl, great write up and thank you. I getting ready to get a new rig and you answered a few question I didnt even know I had yet.
Whats your opinion on the dual core stuff? This is one of my sticking points so far. Im looking at a 4200 or 4400 X2 but a buddy of mine recomended the 4000.  Basicly I want the machine to run AH2 as best as possible being that I dont play much else. But I would like the option to do whatever I want and make sure I plan ahead so I dont need to upgrade too much for about 2 years. Any thoughts?

Offline eagl

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What's the Perfect Computer Setup for Aces High
« Reply #16 on: August 25, 2005, 03:05:21 PM »
A single-core cpu will run games faster than an equally priced dual core cpu...  At least for now.  A dual core A64 X2 will run you a minimum of $500-$700, but you can get a single core cpu that runs 200-300 mhz faster for the same price, and the faster core speed means it will run single applications faster.

For gaming, get single core now.  Maybe later on the dual core cpus will be better suited for gaming but they're not the fastest right now.

That's not to say the dual core cpus aren't great and also very fast, but AH2 certainly won't benefit from a dual core cpu right now so if you're going to spend that much money on the cpu, get a faster single core one.  Either a fast San Diego core, or an FX.  The socket 939 cpus will be around for a while so there'll be plenty of time to upgrade to dual core later on when the price drops.  That's why I would cap your cpu price at $400 or less...  Save the money you'd spend to get the absolute fastest and use it for an upgrade cpu in a year or so.  By then, another $300-$400 will get you much more than spending $800 now would.

Aim for the 90% speed because it costs half as much as the absolute fastest, and spend that other half a year later when it'll buy you waaaay more than the 10% it would have gotten you if you spent it today.  That advice goes for video cards, cpus, and hard drives.  Motherboards are commodity items so spend whatever it takes to get the mobo features you want because they're all within $30ish of each other.  But you can get 90-95% speed on a vid card and spend $450 instead of $600, get 90% on the cpu and spend $400 instead of $1100, and get a 300 gig hard drive for $130 instead of spending $250-$300 for a 400 gig drive.  Then buy what is the 90% solution a year from now, and it'll probably net you a 30 to 50 percent speedup over what's available now, especially in the vid card.

If I had unlimited cash, I'd go for the 7800GTX because the 7800GT is one of those "crippled" versions and I hate those.  If they released a lower clocked 7800GTX that had the full number of pipelines instead of lower clock AND fewer pipelines, then I'd say get that one, since that's essentially what they did with the GF4-4200 and 6800GT.  But since nvidia isn't offering that sort of enthusiast option this time around, I'd say either save the money and go for a 6800GT or go all out and get a 7800GTX.  Of course, I'm probably just being unreasonable because the 7800GT is a very very fast video card right now even with the reduced number of pipelines and some of them overclock rather well so you can get back up to the same GPU speed, just with a couple of fewer pipelines.  According to many benchmarks using today's games, the 7800GT and 7800GTX post nearly indentical scores so you won't miss much getting a 7800GT but you'll save $100-$150 vs. a 7800GTX.
« Last Edit: August 25, 2005, 03:14:02 PM by eagl »
Everyone I know, goes away, in the end.

Offline OOZ662

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What's the Perfect Computer Setup for Aces High
« Reply #17 on: August 25, 2005, 03:42:43 PM »
MB: GIGABYTE GA-8IPE1000PRO-G
CPU: Intel Pentium 4 3.0GHz, Northwood core
GPU: nVidia XFX 6800
Sound: SB Audigy 2 ZS

Gives me around 50 FPS in a 10 person fight with sliders ALMOST maxed.
A Rook who first flew 09/26/03 at the age of 13, has been a GL in 10+ Scenarios, and was two-time Points and First Annual 68KO Cup winner of the AH Extreme Air Racing League.

Offline Slash27

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What's the Perfect Computer Setup for Aces High
« Reply #18 on: August 27, 2005, 09:14:07 PM »
Thank you very much Whels and Eagl. That helps alot.:aok

Offline AmRaaM

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What's the Perfect Computer Setup for Aces High
« Reply #19 on: August 28, 2005, 12:41:39 AM »
plug your stick into the server.