ENTERPRISE

What Can You Buy For Under $160? (Part 2)

1/19/2013 9:18:51 AM

Headset: Corsair Vengeance 1500 Gaming Headset

Price: $144

Corsair Vengeance 1500

Corsair Vengeance 1500

We’re big fans of Corsair’s gaming line, which has produced some absolutely stellar pieces of hardware lately. Ideal for gamers who don’t like the idea of shelling out for costly, foundation quaking speaker systems, the Corsair Vengeance 1500 gaming headset contains single cable Dolby 7.1 headphone technology that allows you to hear games the way they were meant to be heard: loud and with bags of atmosphere.

It’s fully compatible with 3D audio standards and contains a built-in boom-style microphone for voice chat, so there’s everything you need to co-ordinate your inevitable online victories and truly capture the aural nuances of any game you play.

PSU: Corsair TX 650W V2 PSU

Price: $135

Corsair TX 650W V2 PSU

Corsair TX 650W V2 PSU

A new PSU might not be the most exciting present you can buy for yourself, but don’t be too hasty: PSUs need to be replaced when they get old, and an efficient PSU is better for you and your system. Corsair’s Enthusiast Series TX V2 offers one of the best price to performance ratios available, with 80-Plus bronze efficiency rating and a modular cabling system that allows users to select their preferred combination of eight SATA connectors, two PCI connectors and eight four-pin Molex connectors -enough to supply any PC with the juice it needs in the format it requires (and you can even disconnect ones you’re not using). The ultra-quiet 140mm fan only sweetens the deal.

AMD CPU: Bulldozer FX-8120 Black Edition

Price: $152

Bulldozer FX-8120 Black

Bulldozer FX-8120 Black

AMD might have taken a severe hit on its processors again this year in the face of Intel’s blistering Sandy and Ivy Bridge lines, but a whopping 50% discount on one of the company’s fastest CPUs means that if you have an AMD system, there’s never been a better time to upgrade. This 3.1GHz Bulldozer FX-8120 Black Edition chip is unlocked, meaning overclockers can squeeze even better performance out of it, and the chip’s eight-core design is unprecedented elsewhere in the consumer market. It’s still hovering just above $160 from most outlets, but look out for those participating in a $32 cash back scheme that’ll bring it home just under the wire.

Intel CPU: Core i3-3220T

Price: $155

Core i3-3220T

Core i3-3220T

Intel’s entry-level line of Ivy Bridge Core i3’s has only been on shelves for a few months, but their prices are already dropping under $159. The Core i3-3220T is a dual-core desktop chip with quad-core Hyper-Threading functionality. With Intel’s HD Graphics 2500 GPU and a clock speed of 2.8GHz, this isn’t a gaming CPU, but it is a strong all-rounder. If you have a Socket 1155 motherboard that’s begging for a chip upgrade, you could do far worse for the same money. Of course, even though it’s nowhere near the top of the line, it’s still as fast, out of the box, as the Bulldozer FX-8210. If you’re not into overclocking, this is where to spend your money.

Hard Drive: 3TB Seagate Barracuda

Price: $155

3TB Seagate Barracuda

3TB Seagate Barracuda

The New Year offers us all a clean slate, so why not interpret that literally by buying yourself a fresh, empty hard drive that you can fill with downloads? Seagate’s Barracuda drives have a long and reliable history, and this 3TB monster even has the latest SA TA 6Gbps connector, so you shouldn’t have any trouble filling it up as quickly as possible. Remember, 2013 is going to be the year when the popularity of SSDs really explodes, so there’s a good chance that mechanical hard drives will never be as cheap again as they are now. A must for any PC owner who thinks they’re a bit of a data-hoarder.

SSD: OCZ 120GB Vertex 3 SSD

Price: $154

OCZ 120GB Vertex 3 SSD

OCZ 120GB Vertex 3 SSD

It’s probably not the best time to buy an SSD, given the way prices have been dropping and will continue to drop throughout 2013. Then again, if you just can’t wait to get your hands on some of that ultra-fast solid-state storage, this is the best way to do it for under $159. A not-unreasonable 120GB of storage gives you space for your operating system and software, and your system benefits hugely from the 500MB/s read/write speeds that you can only get with a SATA 6Gbps SSD drive. If you want to give your PC the one upgrade that’ll improve it the most, this is the one to go for.

Tablet PC: DGM T-703 Tablet PC

Price: $120

DGM T-703 Tablet PC

DGM T-703 Tablet PC

The DGM-T703 is a 7” Android tablet that you can pick up for under $128 on Amazon, and with the craze for mini-tablets sweeping the world courtesy of the Nexus 7, this might be the cheapest way to get your hands on one at almost a third of the price of Google’s effort. If the price hasn’t clued you in, it’s far from the best tablet on the market - the 800×480 resolution is low, 4GB of storage is stupidly small (although it can be expanded using micro-SD cards) and a 0.3 megapixel camera is laughably bad even for video chatting, but it does run Android 4.0, and the 1.2GHz ARM Cortex A8 CPU is as the same as the one that underpins the Apple A4 (found in the original iPad). Wi-Fi support and HDMI-out turn it into a convincing entertainment and web-browsing machine. If you’ve never owned a tablet or just want an Android machine, the GDM T-703 fits the bill.

Nvidia Graphics: Gainward GeForce GTX 650 1GB

Price: $149

Gainward GeForce GTX 650 1GB

Gainward GeForce GTX 650 1GB

Despite costing less than $160, the GeForce GTX 650 is a fair upgrade that’ll turn your workstation PC into a gaming capable machine in a single stroke. Based on the same revised version of the Kepler architecture seen in the ‘Gamer’s choice’ graphics card, the GeForce GTX 660, the GTX 650 is right up to date despite its slightly cut down specs. Although it benchmarks worse than the Radeon HD 7770, a seasoned overclocker can take advantage of Nvidia’s more robust hardware to unleash the inner-power of this card.

If you know how to get the most out of graphics cards, there’s a real bargain to be had here, but if you’re a bit more tentative, there’s a Radeon across the street with your name on it.

AMD Graphics: Sapphire Radeon HD 7770 1GB

Price: $149

Sapphire Radeon HD 7770 1GB

Sapphire Radeon HD 7770 1GB

It’s a low-end card if you’re a serious gamer, but within our sub-$159 budget, it’s the best graphics card your money can get you. The spiritual successor to the popular HD 5770, it uses AMD’s ‘Cape Verde’ architecture – a cut-down version of AMD’s more impressive Tahiti platform found in the high-end HD 7900 cards. Still, that means it’s running an iteration of the latest hardware, and its DirectX 11 capability and dual mini-DisplayPort-out gives you plenty of room for tweaking in both software and hardware.

Performance is good for the money, even if it’s not going to give you ultra-high definition gaming. However, if you’re upgrading from an on-board GPU, prepare to be blown away by the improvement.

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