Unfortunately, this deal has expired 4 August 2023.
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273°
Posted 20 July 2023
The Verstappen - Ryzen 7 7800X3D - RTX 4090 - 32GB 6000mhz - 360MM Corsair - Corsair 5000X Case - X670 Gaming PC w/code
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Sarden84 Super Poster
Joined in 2014
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About this deal
This deal is expired. Here are some options that might interest you:
Update: STORMFORCE NOW OFFERING 5% CASHBACK VIA TOPCASHBACK SITE AS EXTRA ON TOP OF THE CODE DISCOUNT...
Corsair iCue 5000X Black RGB Tempered Glass ATX Smart Case
Non Sale price £3576.02 with 15% its £3039.61
- which pretty much rockets the latest price of this: uk.pcpartpicker.com/list/Cmt7fv
# Premium 4090 System with out silly build fee's - just a normal day in the office
#Was 3124 in may
PS 15% all Custom Gaming Pc at Stormforce
Early 4090 was striped version in part basis,
# Its The Verstappen of Gaming PC's here comes the hammers.
Corsair iCue 5000X Black RGB Tempered Glass ATX Smart Case
- AMD Ryzen 7 7800X3D – 8 Cores, 16 Threads – 5.0GHz Boost Clock
- Corsair iCUE H150i ELITE CAPELLIX XT, 360mm Radiator Liquid Cooler
- Corsair Vengeance LPX 32GB DDR5 6000MHz C36 DIMM - CMK32GX5M2D6000C36 (2x16GB)
- ASUS TUF GAMING RTX 4090 OC 24GB - TUF-RTX4090-O24G-GAMING
- Solidigm 2.0TB P44 PRO PCIe 4.0 NVMe M.2 SSD
- ASUS PRIME X670-P WiFi AM5 DDR5
- CORSAIR 1000W GOLD FULLY MODULAR RM1000E
- 3-Year Collect, Repair and Return Warranty
Non Sale price £3576.02 with 15% its £3039.61
- which pretty much rockets the latest price of this: uk.pcpartpicker.com/list/Cmt7fv
# Premium 4090 System with out silly build fee's - just a normal day in the office
#Was 3124 in may
PS 15% all Custom Gaming Pc at Stormforce
Early 4090 was striped version in part basis,
# Its The Verstappen of Gaming PC's here comes the hammers.
More details at
Community Updates
Edited by Sarden84, 2 August 2023
118 Comments
sorted byMinimum wage for 23 and over is £10.23 (used to be a good hourly wage, now is horrendous)
£3039.21 / £10.23 = 297.08 / 8 hours a day = 37.135 days. IF you earn minimum wage it took you 8 hours a day for 37 days in order to afford this. Didn't need to include weekends as I was interested in the total amount of days not weeks.
If you earn 2x this much it will take 18 days at 8 hours a day to afford this. So it's worth bearing in mind the factor of time. How much time did it take it get the money to afford this versus how much time it is actually worth to you. Usually a product has some extra value if it saves you time. If you don't like the amount of time it took you to afford this item then it is too expensive for you and time is something none of us can ever buy more of. We can use money to save us time but never to buy more time.
Disclaimer: If any of this doesn't add up it's because I'm an amateur at Mathematics or you just want this more than you care about the time it took you to afford it. Also none of what I said is a judgement for or against anybody wanting to buy this whether they have the means based on what I said above or beyond the means above. It is just perhaps too much time wasted on thinking most likely. This is either depressing or elating or neither. (edited)
Said she wasn't interest in going Dutch
Its certainly cheaper than the competition, but its a very quick and consistent drive. All the components are made by SK Hynix themselves, so the price can be lower because of that.
tomshardware.com/rev…iew
My budget allows me only what I need. I just stare at things like this and try to look away....
You can get RAM 'tuned' for AMD or Intel, that's something to watch for. Some RAM will work with both, some will only be AMD etc.
Don't get bogged down with RAM speed. There's usually a 'sweet spot', AMD last year said it was 6000 which seemed high. I'm not sure that's the case and could have been be said to sell the more expensive kits. For Intel DDR5 it's 5400-5600. It's better to have more RAM than faster RAM once the sweet spot has been identified. The CL timings also matter, you want those low as you can.
Second point, pairing an Intel CPU with an Intel GPU etc. Bascially it doesn't matter. There are benefits if you're going to mess about with things, I've seen tests where same brand CPU/GPU outform a mixed CPU/GPU, but I've seen far more saying it really doesn't matter. I've been mixing CPU/GPU brands, I am right now. It's much more important to get the actual CPU and GPU choices right than to force it to make sure they align in branding.
Hope this helps, ask questions if you need.
Once the prices finally settle I think it will be.
CL timings don't matter much for Intel but do make a bigger difference with AMD, hence the reason I went for a 6000Mhz CL30 kit to pair with the 7800X3D I'll be picking up soon.
I'm hoping I can tweak the timings a bit, CL28 at 6000Mhz would do me just fine. If not I'll drop it down to 5600Mhz as CL28 at that speed shouldn't be an issue and FPS would be higher than 6000Mhz/CL30.
This is a pretty useful comparison vid, at the 7:00 minute mark you can see the differences with speed/timings on AMD -
Go to PCPP: uk.pcpartpicker.com/
Click on "choose a CPU"
head to "Merchants" find: AWD / CCL
two builders on PCPP who do customs,
so when u select one, ull have part lists for that builder only, create a build that clicks ur need and then go fishing for that system via their call centre.
find out what their build fee is, what does that build inc such as extra warrenty and co.
ask them to send u a Quote, use that quote to then go fishing for others builds who aint on PCPP; palicomp / stormforce they will either match it, beat it or challenge it a very nearest or better deal with x because they have alt parts. (edited)
Over the past few months I've been reading contradicting comments regarding DDR5 ram with AMD CPU's and was hoping someone could please clear it up
I had read that most of the new high end AMD chips were capped on the ram to like 5200mhz and 5600mhz. Now obviously this build has 6000mhz ram, so clearly something is wrong, have I misunderstood what I've previously read about DDR5 speeds or in this case is it being overclocked by the builder OR is it a restriction of the mobo ?
I hope I make sense and apologies for making a mess of the thread, but I'm lost on who to ask.
Also I had read that it's a good idea to pair Ryzen CPU's with Radeon cards rather than have this hybrid approach of AMD & Nvidia - is this more tosh ?
Thank you in advance brilliant techie people
As 6000Mhz is the sweet spot for price/performance it doesn't matter too much if you can't run faster RAM.
It doesn't make much difference really, it's more about the model CPU rather than the make. (edited)
for a premium prebuilt, its on the cards for value with decent parts.
its not going to go hot, 500++ never went hot last time in that sence., but certainly one when its offer to get on here because it means buisness and sends upper market challenge.
The cheaper one posted today, calc same break down using cheaper parts which is what cyberpower do and there only ever on the mark when its costco related deal. (edited)
Ryzen 3 3200G
A320
240GB SSD
16GB Ram
CM Case
£249.99 at stormforce :P (edited)
cold as ice
Expand194°
31Posted 1 day ago
Cyberpower, AMD Ryzen 9, 32GB RAM, 2TB SSD NVIDIA GeForce RTX 4090, Gaming Desktop PC
I dunno, the Solidigm P44 Pro is basically an SK Hynix P41 Platinum with slightly different firmware, both Gen 4x4 drives with a DRAM cache (2GB LPDDR4 in this instance) and speeds up to 7000MB/s read and 6500MB/s writes, they get a bit warm, but a lot of Gen 4 drives do.
Its certainly cheaper than the competition, but its a very quick and consistent drive. All the components are made by SK Hynix themselves, so the price can be lower because of that.
tomshardware.com/rev…iew
Yep they are very fast. Got one myself and it seems...solid. The utilities are pretty mediocre but I didn't buy the drive for those.