Ryzen 5 5600G + 16GB (8GBx2) DDR4 + 512GB PCIe SSD + 1TB HDD + 400W PSU
- Under Processor, select "AMD Ryzen 5 5600G (3.9 GHz up to 4.4 GHz , 16 MB L3 cache, 6 cores)"
- Under Memory, select 16 GB DDR4-3200 SDRAM (2 x 8 GB) [+$120]
- Under Secondary storage, select 1 TB HDD storage [+$49]
- Under Storage, select "512 SSD storage"
- Under Graphics Card, select "NVIDIA GeForce RTX 3060 (12 GB GDDR6 dedicated)"
- Under Chassis and Power supply, select "Shadow black front bezel, Acid Green Chrome logo with 400W Power supply"
MOTHERBOARD INFORMATION
HP uses a customized uATX motherboard called Erica6 in this build. This is based on AMD B550A chipset which is a cut down version of AMD B550 Chipset without the PCIe 4.0 Support.
Motherboard Spec: https://support.hp.com/us-en/document/c07094657
HP product page of this Desktop only lists the back I/O Ports. So, providing the full set of IO Ports:
Back I/O ports
- (1) RJ-45 Ethernet port
- (1) HDMI 1.4b/HDCP 2.2 port
- (1) VGA port
- (3) Audio ports (Line-in/Line-out/Microphone)
- (4) USB 2.0 Type-A ports
- (1) Power input port
- (1) Headphone/microphone port
- (1) USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-C port (5 Gbps data transfer)
- (4) USB 3.2 Gen 1 Type-A ports (5 Gbps data transfer)
- (1) HP 3-in-1 media card reader (SD/SDHC/SDXC)
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If you go with the fewest options with the 3060, the total comes to $1040.
The 3060 alone is selling for around $900 on eBay.
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2. The HP's motherboard has two memory slots, so you'll have to purchase 2 x 16GB DDR4-3200 SDRAM or equivalent. I don't see a picture of the back of computer, so I can't tell if the motherboard has a dedicated video port or not. An earlier poster stated the CPU has a built in VEGA graphics. So you should be able to use the PC without the GPU. Usually in past, HP would place a removable cover over the motherboard's VGA/HDMI ports, as not to cause confusion when the PCs came with a separate GPU.
When GPUs are more readily available, you will be limited to the available space of the case as to the length/height of the GPU card you can get. Just make sure you measure the space you have to work with.
The below links are to the previous model TG01-0170m, but I think the Systemboard viewer may be same system board they are using for the current model. The Parts Locator PDF has a view of the rear of the case.
https://support.hp.com/us-en/prod...26/manuals
http://h10032.www1.hp.
http://h10032.www1.hp.
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I've been trying to get my hands on a gaming PC for a very long time now and am pretty new to this whole gaming cost and experience
My total comes out to 1173 before taxes...seems slick if the gpu costs 900 bucks? Saw a couple of thumbs down so just wanna check before I pull the trigger here...
Windows 10 Home
AMD Ryzen™ 5 5600G (3.9 GHz up to 4.4 GHz , 16 MB L3 cache, 6 cores)
8 GB DDR4-3200 SDRAM (2 x 4 GB)
512 SSD storage
No Secondary storage
NVIDIA® GeForce RTX™ 3060 (12 GB GDDR6 dedicated)
Shadow black front bezel, Acid Green Chrome logo with 400W Power supply
Realtek Canary ac 2x2 +Bluetooth 5 M.2 2230 PCI-e+USB WW with 2 Antennas
unsure of the 4600g vs 5600g performance but a 2060 super and a 3060 are very similar from what i found.
i would say the deal isn't bad, but it could also be better. I am pretty sure I have seen machines with 3070s for 1200.. however they almost instantly go oos and this is very infrequent. they do go for 1500 pretty often then and then typically have 16gb ram and r7 cpus.
unsure of the 4600g vs 5600g performance but a 2060 super and a 3060 are very similar from what i found.
i would say the deal isn't bad, but it could also be better. I am pretty sure I have seen machines with 3070s for 1200.. however they almost instantly go oos and this is very infrequent. they do go for 1500 pretty often then and then typically have 16gb ram and r7 cpus.
You are confusing crypto, with blockchain, which crypto uses. Blockchain is the wonderful tech. Crypto is just one thing to use it for, and since you have to go through centralized 'banks' to use it, it will never be anonymous for the majority (except the people who steal millions every other month, oddly, those people never get 'found'.).
I've been trying to get my hands on a gaming PC for a very long time now and am pretty new to this whole gaming cost and experience
My total comes out to 1173 before taxes...seems slick if the gpu costs 900 bucks? Saw a couple of thumbs down so just wanna check before I pull the trigger here...
Windows 10 Home
AMD Ryzen™ 5 5600G (3.9 GHz up to 4.4 GHz , 16 MB L3 cache, 6 cores)
8 GB DDR4-3200 SDRAM (2 x 4 GB)
512 SSD storage
No Secondary storage
NVIDIA® GeForce RTX™ 3060 (12 GB GDDR6 dedicated)
Shadow black front bezel, Acid Green Chrome logo with 400W Power supply
Realtek Canary ac 2x2 +Bluetooth 5 M.2 2230 PCI-e+USB WW with 2 Antennas
Is it decent? Yes. Is it worth all the $1100 they are asking for no, not really.
Again they use generic brand or lowest tier low reliability low reviewed parts to mass produce to maximize profit. See how it does not even specify what brand the 3060 is which is the strong selling point here.
If you have a system you can hold out on after all this covid and mining pc part bubble blows over just sit it out. Like if you can play Overwatch on 60 fps you're fine playing most AAA games anyways.
If you have money to burn or got leftover from stimulus sure why not. But with that money go to newegg or Amazon and pick parts put and put together your own with parts you love. Personally I'd stay away from these monotone mass production s bc they're the ones hogging the gpu supplies through connections with suppliers most likely which is driving prices up and keeping them there, like scalping. And these pics are terrible for upgrading. They solder parts or put in junk motherboards so you throw it away after three years and buy a new one. That's what they're betting on.
Is it decent? Yes. Is it worth all the $1100 they are asking for no, not really.
Again they use generic brand or lowest tier low reliability low reviewed parts to mass produce to maximize profit. See how it does not even specify what brand the 3060 is which is the strong selling point here.
If you have a system you can hold out on after all this covid and mining pc part bubble blows over just sit it out. Like if you can play Overwatch on 60 fps you're fine playing most AAA games anyways.
If you have money to burn or got leftover from stimulus sure why not. But with that money go to newegg or Amazon and pick parts put and put together your own with parts you love. Personally I'd stay away from these monotone mass production s bc they're the ones hogging the gpu supplies through connections with suppliers most likely which is driving prices up and keeping them there, like scalping. And these pics are terrible for upgrading. They solder parts or put in junk motherboards so you throw it away after three years and buy a new one. That's what they're betting on.
Oh well. At least I have a huge back catalog of games that do run good.
unsure of the 4600g vs 5600g performance but a 2060 super and a 3060 are very similar from what i found.
i would say the deal isn't bad, but it could also be better. I am pretty sure I have seen machines with 3070s for 1200.. however they almost instantly go oos and this is very infrequent. they do go for 1500 pretty often then and then typically have 16gb ram and r7 cpus.
Is it decent? Yes. Is it worth all the $1100 they are asking for no, not really.
Again they use generic brand or lowest tier low reliability low reviewed parts to mass produce to maximize profit. See how it does not even specify what brand the 3060 is which is the strong selling point here.
If you have a system you can hold out on after all this covid and mining pc part bubble blows over just sit it out. Like if you can play Overwatch on 60 fps you're fine playing most AAA games anyways.
If you have money to burn or got leftover from stimulus sure why not. But with that money go to newegg or Amazon and pick parts put and put together your own with parts you love. Personally I'd stay away from these monotone mass production s bc they're the ones hogging the gpu supplies through connections with suppliers most likely which is driving prices up and keeping them there, like scalping. And these pics are terrible for upgrading. They solder parts or put in junk motherboards so you throw it away after three years and buy a new one. That's what they're betting on.
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FFS let us just build our own APU systems due to the video card situation.
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