Quote Originally Posted by dazed1992 View Post
--For my ram i was running 8gb the one listed below.
-http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16820231314
Now im not sure what i should go for about ram.Im looking for about 32gigs since i will be running 11 copies of wow.And i will Have internet explorer open at all times most likely.I do however not know what ram i should go for as i stated above.As well i dont quite undestand the timing part of ram.

My motherboard states.Number of Memory Slots4×240pinMemory StandardDDR3 1066/1333/1600*/2133*(OC)Maximum Memory Supported32GBChannel SupportedDual ChannelThough when i seard to buy ram its telling me things like 9-9-9-10 or so im leaving this empty for now as im still reading online trying to figure it out.Maybye someone could tell me here in a few words.
I'm going to quote from another forum:
If I were shopping for high quality memory, I would use the following parameters as a guide...

* DDR3 rated at 1.5v or lower
* DDR3 rated at the lowest CAS I could afford
* DDR3 rated at the highest clock speed I could afford
* Limit the scope of my purchease to G.Skill, Mushkin, Corsair XMS or Crucial (non-Ballistix)

While not wavering on the voltage point, I would balance the other issues with my budget.

Remember my goal is not pure "benchmarking" performance, but simply finding the highest quality memory I can afford.
The only reason I pay a premium for low latency, high speed, low voltage memory is...
Quality and quality alone.
1.5v is the JEDEC DDR3 voltage standard.
Stay with 1.5v or less if you can afford it..
As for all that timing stuff, here's another quote (from the same thread) which might be a little difficult to understand if you're new to this:
Let's just do the math, the frequency is expressed in Hertz, which means "cycles per second". So, the DDR3 2133 will perform 2133 cycles a second while the DDR3 1600 will do, well, 1600. You, of course, know this.

Now the CAS latency is given in cycles. So, a CAS8 DIMM will take 8 cycles to respond and the CAS11, 11 cycles.


Now putting it all together - the DDR3 2133 CAS11 will take 11/2133 seconds, which is equal to 0.00516 seconds, to respond while the DDR3 1600 CAS 8 will take 8/1600, which is equal to 0,005 seconds, to respond. Thus, the 1600 DIMM is faster. For your dilemma, you're contemplating 0.000516 versus 0.00422 or timing difference of 0.00094 seconds! How fast are your reflexes and how long are you willing to wait for your memory to respond? Yes, I'm being an ass. You'll never ever see, feel or sense a difference.


You'll also want to carefully check the timings, since the higher the MHz the looser they are. I've seen 2133 DIMMS with 11-14-28-30, simply junk. As well as voltage, avoid anything higher than 1.5V. The only way many manufacturers get a respectable CAS at high MHz is to crank the voltage to 1.65V. Hence is why the 1.35V Samsung DIMMS are so smashing. Also, less DIMMs generally means less load to the memory controller. Therefore, 2x8GB is better than 4x4GB.
I ran 20 clients in Orgrimmar off of 16GB of RAM, so I don't see why you couldn't run 11 off of 16GB. You could always just buy another set of DIMMs from your Newegg link for $40 and be done with it, unless you really want 32GB of RAM.


Quote Originally Posted by dazed1992 View Post
--Video card. I was running a gtx 560 ti
Im thinking beetween 2 cards currently.One i saw in another thread.
-http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16814130801 From the 680 series.(not sure if this is the best 680 though)
- Or a more modest http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16814130785
-or http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16814130824
You want the fastest single-GPU video card with the most RAM that you can afford. Any of the choices you've linked above should work perfectly fine. I'm not really a fan of the 6xx series, but I don't know if I'd recommend AMD either since I haven't owned one in a long time.


Quote Originally Posted by dazed1992 View Post
And last but not least a ssd.
Im still looking for one.Im not sure what size i should get.Because i dont turn my computer off often so booting up isnt a issue.Though i heard it helps the computer to put the OS on it so im not sure what to do.Aswell i use 2 WOW folders so im going to be needing around 250 GB+- a few gigs.So for now this will be empty tonight.
It comes down to how much money you have to use for this upgrade. Do you want an SSD dedicated to your OS and your games? Do you want to split them up? Do you want them both on one big SSD? All I can say is... The larger the SSD, the better it performs (up to about 256GB).