Recommended Budget Systems

Note the below prices include neither taxes nor shipping as those vary based on the buyer's specific location. The RAM, hard drive, optical drive, power supply, and case recommendations are all, of course, interchangeable between the AMD and Intel-based systems, so mixing and matching those components is unproblematic.

Budget AMD Athlon II X2 system

As noted on previous pages, the AMD motherboards are largely interchangeable and the inclusion of the ASRock board in this list is largely subjective. In this case, it is my opinion that the ASRock board's richer feature set outweighs its shorter warranty.

Component Product Price
CPU AMD Athlon II X2 250 (dual-core 3.0GHz) $60
Motherboard ASRock 880GM-LE (HD 4250 IGP) $55
RAM GSkill 4GB DDR3-1333 kit $26
Hard drive Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 500GB $70
Optical drive Lite-on iHAS124-04 $18
Power supply Antec Earthwatts 380W $40
Case BitFenix Merc Alpha $39
Operating system Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit $100
  Total: $408

Budget AMD A4-3300 system

It's important to remember that the A4-3300 uses socket FM1 motherboards, so you cannot swap only the processor between these two AMD builds. You must change both the chip and the board. Given the benchmark results on the second page, the Athlon II X2 250 system above is a better general, basic usage computer—if you are not interested in gaming. However, if you are interested in playing less system-demanding titles at lower resolutions, as well as general computing, the following A4-3300 system will let you game on a budget. For anything more demanding, we'd recommend either upgrading to a quad-core Llano APU (with its faster GPU), or add a budget GPU to one of the other two builds. The Llano system also uses less power than the Athlon build, though the Celeron still wins as the low-power champ of this trio.

Component Product Price
APU AMD A4-3300 (dual-core 2.5GHz, HD 6410) $70
Motherboard ASRock A55M-HVS $59
RAM Mushkin 4GB DDR3-1333 kit $26
Hard drive Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 500GB $70
Optical drive Lite-on iHAS124-04 $18
Power supply Antec Earthwatts 380W $40
Case Fractal Design Core 1000 $40
Operating system Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit $100
  Total: $420

Budget Intel Celeron system

Similar to the AMD system, the budget Intel boards are also interchangeable, and in this case I include the Biostar motherboard largely because it offers a DVI port and legacy PCI slots (whereas the ASRock and MSI boards do not).

Component Product Price Rebate
CPU Intel Celeron G530 (dual-core 2.4GHz, Intel HD Graphics) $57  
Motherboard Biostar H61ML $60  
RAM Mushkin 4GB DDR3-1333 kit $26  
Hard drive Seagate Barracuda 7200.12 500GB $70  
Optical drive Lite-on iHAS124-04 $18  
Power supply Corsair CX430 V2 $45 -$10
Case Fractal Design Core 1000 $40  
Operating system Windows 7 Home Premium 64-bit $100  
  Total: $416 -$10

Suggested upgrades

Neither the Celeron nor Athlon II X2 systems as configured will work as a gaming computer. Adding a Radeon HD 5670 will bump both systems near $500, or a more capable Radeon HD 6770 will push them over $500. Including an SSD will not significantly change the overall cost of the system given current HDD pricing; it's worth considering ditching the mechanical hard drive altogether if you don't need much storage space given the relatively high cost of platter-based drives right now. (Note that you'll still want a larger capacity drive if you plan on storing any video or lots of pictures, and if you want to install more than a couple modern games.) As discussed earlier, the Llano platform with an A4 chip isn't going to impress in terms of benchmarks; upgrading to a faster A6 or A8 chip would help, but that will also increase the price quite a bit. If you're interested in going that route, we'd also suggest looking at motherboards with the A75 chipset, which adds native USB 3.0 and SATA 6Gbps support.

Closing Thoughts

If it weren't for the anomalously high prices of hard drives at the moment, budget systems built around AMD and Intel CPUs would be well under $400—OS included. That's about 10% less than the budget systems we outlined back in February of this year. While the AMD AM3 system hasn't changed all that much, on the Intel side, you're getting a substantially more powerful computer today than earlier this year, and one with much better upgradeability to boot. AMD's Llano platform is a bit of an odd man out at this price, as the dual-core Llano fails to really impress given the cut-down GPU, but about $20 more will net you a modest gaming system if you're willing to go that route.

Once more, it's important to note that the upcoming holiday season will present lots of great deals for budget-conscious builders. The Hot Deals section of AnandTech's forums is a great place to find and share the latest low prices on components. Further, the General Hardware section of the forums is a great place to ask for and share advice with fellow computer enthusiasts.

RAM, HDDs, SSDs, GPUs, PSUs, and Cases
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  • Hubb1e - Tuesday, November 8, 2011 - link

    I really don't understand why these Llano chips sport such low clock speeds. The Llano has shown to overclock at stock voltage over 3.5ghz and yet they sell this A4 at 2.5ghz. Wouldn't this be a better chip at 3ghz? I suppose they would use more power at 3ghz but not THAT much more. I have a hard time justifying a 2.5ghz Phenon II speed chip, but at 3 ghz and above coupled with the 160 radeon cores this would be a decent performer. I just don't understand it at all. The chips will run faster and on a desktop who cares about an extra 5W at load. I'm just confused as hell. It feels like AMD is shooting themselves in the foot. The Llano chips could be really good with some extra mhz.
  • Prosthetic Head - Tuesday, November 8, 2011 - link

    The gaming section compares the fusion part to a reasonable discrete GPU in a way which I think is slightly misleading. It the competing systems are to be upgraded by addition of a discrete GPU then the fusion system should also be upgraded with a discrete GPU in hybrid crossfire (or whatever they are calling it now) or to the top end A8 part. Otherwise you are comparing substantially more expensive systems to the low end fusion system at a price point where very little money goes a long way in terms of upgrades.

    Other than that a good article with some sensible recommendations, thanks.
  • just4U - Tuesday, November 8, 2011 - link

    I was disgusted at recent pricing on hard drives. Seagate has been low man on the totem for some time.. and their drives typically ran for $39 (500G) and $54(1T) here in Canada.. Now though? HAH.. $99/$130 respectively. I've been meaning to send a 500 G WD Black in for RMA and at these prices.. I certainly will.. (it's at $140 GAH!!!!)

    I tell you, SSDs don't look quite so expensive right now.
  • Taft12 - Wednesday, November 9, 2011 - link

    Good lord man, read a news site once in a while!
  • mino - Wednesday, November 9, 2011 - link

    What you mean by that.

    THE ARTICLE was published with _completely_ obsolete HDD prices. Now you bitch about a reader noticing it for being "uninformed"?
    Yeah, sure.

    With those HDD prices OEM systems start looking all the more appealing ...
  • bgclevenger - Wednesday, November 9, 2011 - link

    a lot of good info here concerning hardware choices, but what about software? since these are budget builds and not gaming machines, install linux instead of windows and save $100.
  • scubba85 - Wednesday, November 9, 2011 - link

    70$ for a hdd?
  • mino - Wednesday, November 9, 2011 - link

    more like $100 these days ... :GRRR
  • madmachinist2 - Thursday, November 10, 2011 - link

    Were the power consumption measurements taken with the discreet GPU's installed in the Celeron and Athalon? if not, is it possible to find out what the correct power consumption ratings would be?
  • Schmich - Thursday, November 10, 2011 - link

    I know that gaming was named but in my opinion Linux should be named as well. For those who don't game then using something like Ubuntu would be a lot better.

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