In article <c32lto$tb$1@newsg4.svr.pol.co.uk>,
sa11ysmail DeleteThis @yahoo.co.uk says...
> For my next PC I might build my own around a Pentium 4 system but I'm
> also thinking of buying a Dell as they have some good deals on in some
> of the UK papers and are reputed to be quiet (important for me). Most
> though seem to use integrated graphics. The only games I play are stuff
> like a demo version of Age of Empires 2 and other freebies/demos. They
> dont count as 3D games do they? I do a bit of scanning sometimes too.
>
> So, do you think I would be ok with integrated graphics or should I get
> one with an AGP card?
>
>
If you really mean "quiet", my recommendation is - do not -
get a Dell.
First of all they don't use the quietist hard drives and
most give off a high pitched whine. In my experience,
Seagate is the quietest hard drive.
Their power supplies are reasonably quiet.
The case fans are built into a holder with a shroud around
it to help cool the CPU which is cooled with a heatsink,
but no fan.
These case fans cannot be replaced by an "extra quiet"
Pabst or Zalman because they are a one piece unit made to
fit with the shroud.
I have a Dimension 8200 and I replaced the hard drive
immediately and later, when the fan got noisy with age, I
had to rig something to mount a fan which goes faster and
slower (therefore softer and louder). The result is that
the fan is not recognized by the motherboard and everytime
I boot the machine, I have to tell it that it really does
have a fan even though it thinks it doesn't.
I guess what I'm saying is that they are built to be left
as they are. If you want a really quiet machine, you'd be
better off getting something that uses more standard
construction so that you can change a part you find noisy.
Two friends got the 4600. Both have reasonably quiet fans
and reasonably quiet power supplies. But both have whining
hard drives.
Louise<!-- ~MESSAGE_AFTER~ -->
>> Stay informed about: Do I need a graphics card?