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Need thoughts on a quiet PC that's great for rendering, video editing and office work...

Joined
Feb 15, 2009
Messages
649 (0.11/day)
Location
Norway, which means Amazon is not available...
System Name Winter v3.2024
Processor Intel i7 12700K (since november 2021)
Motherboard Gigabyte Z690 Gaming X (since november 2021)
Cooling Air Liquid Freezer II 360 with LGA1700 kit (since november 2021)
Memory Crucial Ballistix 2x16gb 3600mhz C16 (since november 2021)
Video Card(s) Gigabyte RTX 3060 Ti Gaming OC Pro LHR - Rev3.0 (since july 2022)
Storage 1x 1TB WD Blue SN570 SSD, 1x Seagate 4TB SATA
Display(s) 1x 55" LG C1 4k OLED, 1x Gigabyte 32" M32Q and 2x AOC 27" CG1
Case Fractal Design Define R6 (since 2018 and still working like a charm!)
Power Supply Corsair RM850x black (since august 2022)
Mouse Razor Deathadder v2 (since december 2021)
Keyboard Varmilo VEA109 v2 MX Silent Red (since august 2022)
Software Windows 11 Pro
This newbie is planning to get a new PC (Windows, no Apple for me) that will handle office work, rendering and some video editing easily and nicely. I do a lot of GoPro filming, so editing those videos should be a breeze. No gaming for me as I only play retro games anyway, which doesn't require that many resources, I believe...

The PC must be quiet. My friend's got at Fractal Design case and I can barely hear his PC... So a quiet case is necessary.

Does Intel/AMD matter? If not, which CPU type should I opt for?

RAM I believe is important, so 32GB should be sufficient enough?

Loads of storage will be needed as well, but 4-6 TB should be enough for me.

Budget: about €2000 / $2300, but a bit flexible with this.

Any thoughts/examples on a setup/parts that would be great for my PC?
 
Check out be quiet! Cases too and their silent wings fans are super quiet and gets the air going to keep your workstation cooled
 
@winterwonderland

Hello.

Is this parts list complete or is anything missing? Do you need peripherals as well?

Case + fans
PSU
CPU
CPU cooler
Motherboard
RAM
GPU
OS drive
Work/Storage drive
 
Check out be quiet! Cases too and their silent wings fans are super quiet and gets the air going to keep your workstation cooled

Oh cool! Yes, i will be sure to check them out. Any specific be quiet! case model that is quiet, or?

@winterwonderland

Hello.

Is this parts list complete or is anything missing? Do you need peripherals as well?

Case + fans
PSU
CPU
CPU cooler
Motherboard
RAM
GPU
OS drive
Work/Storage drive

Yes, that list is what i am looking for. No peripherals needed.
 
Workstation tends to be very different from gaming and it's closer to the server space than the rest.
You will want a LOT of very fast cores, not just threads...
A very large kit of memory like 32-64GB that can fit not just your editor apps but your entire workflow.
The GPU accelerator is something I'm still trying to figure out for myself.
Went all in on NVENC with a P620 2GB. You will need more vram, especially if working with 4K footage.
I haven't run into this problem yet and I'm just finally getting used to having multiple displays at my desk.

Storage acceleration matters a ton. You'll want something extremely fast but not necessarily LARGE.
Consider taking a pair of NVMe drives and running them in RAID. I'm planning on doing this soon.
For high capacity, long term storage, VOD uploads, you should have a NAS, which is a whole other conversation.
Network acceleration matters less if the fast storage is already on the editor workstation.
It matters more if your network is arranged in a way where everything tunnels through a garbage ISP's gateway.
Fans...The bigger and slower, they usually perform much better.
Pumps...Similar but different enough that you're hunting for a very specific steady RPM to keep it quiet.
Depending on the chassis you'll want vibration dampners between the PSU and fan cages if it has them.
That's about all I can offer. Don't be afraid to go cheaper or older generation.
The point of the computer is to do the job. Becoming old doesn't obsolete it like a gaming computer.
 
PCPartPicker Part List

CPU: Intel Core Ultra 9 285K 3.7 GHz 24-Core Processor ($589.45 @ Amazon)
CPU Cooler: be quiet! Dark Rock Pro 5 CPU Cooler ($102.99 @ Amazon)
Motherboard: ASRock Z890 Pro RS ATX LGA1851 Motherboard ($214.99 @ Newegg)
Memory: Patriot Venom 64 GB (2 x 32 GB) DDR5-6000 CL30 Memory ($184.99 @ Amazon)
Storage: Crucial T700 W/Heatsink 1 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 5.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive ($142.00 @ Amazon)
Storage: Patriot Viper VP4300 Lite 4 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive ($219.99 @ Newegg)
Video Card: Gigabyte WINDFORCE OC Rev 2.0 GeForce RTX 3060 12GB 12 GB Video Card ($342.98 @ Newegg)
Case: Fractal Design Define R5 ATX Mid Tower Case ($121.99 @ Amazon)
Power Supply: Asus ROG Strix Aura Edition 850 W 80+ Gold Certified Fully Modular ATX Power Supply ($184.99 @ B&H)
Total: $2104.37
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2025-04-20 08:09 EDT-0400




here is my suggested build :
the case is older generation and doesn´t have all the modern bells and whistles but it has exellent build quality and uses thick materials .
(i was using this case with i7 9700K and gtx 1080 build and to this date i didn´t own a better case)
since you want quiet operation i customized the parts to meet this requirement - case, power supply and cpu cooler are all silent oriented .
rog strix aura will cost you a bit more than other good 850w units but it´s amongs the most quiet psus out there.

as for the graphics card there are more "silent" models of 3060 out there
but 3060 is a low-maintenance card in general
also high end models cost ridiculous money (which is not worth it since in the end of the day it is still only rtx 3060)
that being said this gigabyte model also has a silent mode when gpu is idle or under light load .
(the debate can also be had about whether or not you even need a discrete graphics card ,
but it can help with some work tasks and since you occasionally play some older titles this card should be justified -
although its price is a bit too high for a 2 generations old video card - but there simply is not any other decent option for similar price if we want to avoid used/second hand parts)

as for the platform itself you can opt for AM5 or a cheaper core 7 cpu (265K would also get the job done nicely if you want to spare some cash,
but since the budget allows it i went for the best possible cpu this platform has to offer)
when it comes to memory i would advice to go for 2x32gb straight off the bat .
 
Last edited:
Fractal Design Torrent and Torrent Compact cases are good starting points for a quiet build. Those 180mm fans move a lot of air for not a lot of RPM. Which variant to choose will largely depend on how much storage support you need. The Compact supports one 3.5 drive and two 2.5, while the full-size can handle two and four respectively. Drive locations aren't well-cooled, though, so it may not be the best choice if looking at hot spinners.
 
Here's a quick build with some good parts. I'm not sure what to suggest for a gpu as I don't know which programs you use and how they benefit from Nvidia's cuda platform or how much vram you need. They're all overpriced right now.

PCPartPicker Part List

CPU: AMD Ryzen 9 9950X 4.3 GHz 16-Core Processor ($548.99 @ Amazon)
CPU Cooler: ARCTIC Liquid Freezer III 420 72.8 CFM Liquid CPU Cooler
Motherboard: ASRock Phantom Gaming X870E Nova WiFi ATX AM5 Motherboard ($349.99 @ Newegg)
Memory: G.Skill Flare X5 64 GB (2 x 32 GB) DDR5-6000 CL30 Memory ($194.99 @ Amazon)
Storage: Samsung 990 EVO 1 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 5.0 X2 NVME Solid State Drive ($69.98 @ Amazon)
Storage: Samsung 990 Pro 4 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive ($299.99 @ Amazon)
Case: be quiet! Silent Base 802 ATX Mid Tower Case ($215.99 @ Amazon)
Power Supply: FSP Group Hydro PTM X PRO,Gen5 1000 W 80+ Platinum Certified Fully Modular ATX Power Supply ($169.99 @ Amazon)
Total: $1849.92
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2025-04-20 10:34 EDT-0400
 
This newbie is planning to get a new PC (Windows, no Apple for me) that will handle office work, rendering and some video editing easily and nicely. I do a lot of GoPro filming, so editing those videos should be a breeze. No gaming for me as I only play retro games anyway, which doesn't require that many resources, I believe...

The PC must be quiet. My friend's got at Fractal Design case and I can barely hear his PC... So a quiet case is necessary.

Does Intel/AMD matter? If not, which CPU type should I opt for?

RAM I believe is important, so 32GB should be sufficient enough?

Loads of storage will be needed as well, but 4-6 TB should be enough for me.

Budget: about €2000 / $2300, but a bit flexible with this.

Any thoughts/examples on a setup/parts that would be great for my PC?
Do you have any add in card requirements that go beyond GPU and NVMe? If so you should take that into account for motherboard selection. For example if you need a Capture card or Storage controller and 10G NIC you might need to consider getting a motherboard with the 10G NIC built-in.
 
Fairly rough build, there's scope for optimization still.


Workstation tends to be very different from gaming and it's closer to the server space than the rest.
You will want a LOT of very fast cores, not just threads...
A very large kit of memory like 32-64GB that can fit not just your editor apps but your entire workflow.
The GPU accelerator is something I'm still trying to figure out for myself.
Went all in on NVENC with a P620 2GB. You will need more vram, especially if working with 4K footage.
I haven't run into this problem yet and I'm just finally getting used to having multiple displays at my desk.

Storage acceleration matters a ton. You'll want something extremely fast but not necessarily LARGE.
Consider taking a pair of NVMe drives and running them in RAID. I'm planning on doing this soon.
For high capacity, long term storage, VOD uploads, you should have a NAS, which is a whole other conversation.
Network acceleration matters less if the fast storage is already on the editor workstation.
It matters more if your network is arranged in a way where everything tunnels through a garbage ISP's gateway.
Fans...The bigger and slower, they usually perform much better.
Pumps...Similar but different enough that you're hunting for a very specific steady RPM to keep it quiet.
Depending on the chassis you'll want vibration dampners between the PSU and fan cages if it has them.
That's about all I can offer. Don't be afraid to go cheaper or older generation.
The point of the computer is to do the job. Becoming old doesn't obsolete it like a gaming computer.

PCPartPicker Part List

CPU: Intel Core Ultra 9 285K 3.7 GHz 24-Core Processor ($589.45 @ Amazon)
CPU Cooler: be quiet! Dark Rock Pro 5 CPU Cooler ($102.99 @ Amazon)
Motherboard: ASRock Z890 Pro RS ATX LGA1851 Motherboard ($214.99 @ Newegg)
Memory: Patriot Venom 64 GB (2 x 32 GB) DDR5-6000 CL30 Memory ($184.99 @ Amazon)
Storage: Crucial T700 W/Heatsink 1 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 5.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive ($142.00 @ Amazon)
Storage: Patriot Viper VP4300 Lite 4 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive ($219.99 @ Newegg)
Video Card: Gigabyte WINDFORCE OC Rev 2.0 GeForce RTX 3060 12GB 12 GB Video Card ($342.98 @ Newegg)
Case: Fractal Design Define R5 ATX Mid Tower Case ($121.99 @ Amazon)
Power Supply: Asus ROG Strix Aura Edition 850 W 80+ Gold Certified Fully Modular ATX Power Supply ($184.99 @ B&H)
Total: $2104.37
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2025-04-20 08:09 EDT-0400




here is my suggested build :
the case is older generation and doesn´t have all the modern bells and whistles but it has exellent build quality and uses thick materials .
(i was using this case with i7 9700K and gtx 1080 build and to this date i didn´t own a better case)
since you want quiet operation i customized the parts to meet this requirement - case, power supply and cpu cooler are all silent oriented .
rog strix aura will cost you a bit more than other good 850w units but it´s amongs the most quiet psus out there.

as for the graphics card there are more "silent" models of 3060 out there
but 3060 is a low-maintenance card in general
also high end models cost ridiculous money (which is not worth it since in the end of the day it is still only rtx 3060)
that being said this gigabyte model also has a silent mode when gpu is idle or under light load .
(the debate can also be had about whether or not you even need a discrete graphics card ,
but it can help with some work tasks and since you occasionally play some older titles this card should be justified -
although its price is a bit too high for a 2 generations old video card - but there simply is not any other decent option for similar price if we want to avoid used/second hand parts)

as for the platform itself you can opt for AM5 or a cheaper core 7 cpu (265K would also get the job done nicely if you want to spare some cash,
but since the budget allows it i went for the best possible cpu this platform has to offer)
when it comes to memory i would advice to go for 2x32gb straight off the bat .

Fractal Design Torrent and Torrent Compact cases are good starting points for a quiet build. Those 180mm fans move a lot of air for not a lot of RPM. Which variant to choose will largely depend on how much storage support you need. The Compact supports one 3.5 drive and two 2.5, while the full-size can handle two and four respectively. Drive locations aren't well-cooled, though, so it may not be the best choice if looking at hot spinners.

Do you have any add in card requirements that go beyond GPU and NVMe? If so you should take that into account for motherboard selection. For example if you need a Capture card or Storage controller and 10G NIC you might need to consider getting a motherboard with the 10G NIC built-in.

Wow, thanks for such great and elaborate responses, you all! :) And thanks for setting up PC parts as well!

There were a lot of technical things here that I've got no clue about. The point of the setup is to have a simple, but an enough powerful of a PC that will handle some easy video rendering and editing for the mortal being. I will certainly not be having anything "industrial" stuff, meaning that I will not require a server etc. to be happy with what I will be doing. Nothing too extensive or elaborate. I also do not plan to make fancy video shots like with drones etc.

I should have stated this in my OP: As long as the PC is more/better designed for video editing and rendering rather than gaming, I am good, since I won't be gaming.

The point of this post was to see which CPU type I should go for, AMD or Intel, how much RAM I would need, which mobo that will "survive" for a while, appropriate PSU and how much storage I would need.

Unfortunately, since I live in Norway, I will NOT be ordering ANY parts on Amazon, Newegg etc., so I'll have to rely on norwegian stores such a Komplett.no / Proshop.no etc.

There is no time limit to this, but I will scout for special offers etc. I am in no rush either, but preferably by this summer, I should have a new PC in place.

Ok, so far, it seems like the case is more or less established when it comes to the parts I should be on the lookout for:

CPU: I have no idea which one would be preferable for my purposes, really. Intel or AMD? I am leaning more towards Intel, because that is the CPU I have best and most experiences with...

CPU cooler: This one seems to be an easy choice: Arctic Liquid Freezer III. It's what my friend also has, and he is very happy with it.

Motherboard: This I believe I will get according to which CPU I will go for...

RAM: I will have no less than 32GB, for sure. 32GB seems to be sufficient enough for my purposes. Maybe 64GB if I can fit it within my budget.

GPU: This is another one that's up for a debate. It seems though that 12GB is preferred memory for a GPU for my purposes. A silent one would also be very preferable, but I can sacrifice a bit quietness vs. more power and efficiency. A 3060 would certainly save a lot on the budget, for sure.

Storage: I see that for the you lot suggest 2TB M.2 storages, so I assume that 1 is a Windows-dedicated one, while the other is for the content storage, yes? How many M.2 storages can I fit onto 1 mobo?

Case: It'll either be a be quiet or a Fractal Design. I have experiences with FD since it's what my friend also has, and they are very quiet and "padded".

PSU: I should got for 750-850W it seems, according to what you guys have suggested. Any more seems to be overkill.

For software: Since DaVinci Resolve will be my preferred video editor (since I do not know of any other FREE (no trial) video editing softwares), I will go with that. I used to be familiar with Capcut until it was no longer free.

If you have any parts for those areas that are yet to be decided, feel free to come with suggestions. Thanks for the suggestions so far! :)
 
@winterwonderland

I was going to post about the fact you live in Norway as per your location details.
Therefore this small modification is needed here: https://no.pcpartpicker.com/

The configs using USD prices are apparently too optimistic to what can be achieved using NOK prices converted to EUR.
Looking at prices for proshop and klink and assuming they are representative for the current market situation in your country, then a rough sketch would be the following, totalling about 24000 NOK which would be about 2000 €.

Case + fans: Montech Air 903 Max - 1150 NOK
PSU: be quiet! Pure Power 12 750 W - 1402 NOK
CPU: Intel 265K - 4768 NOK
CPU cooler: Arctic Freezer III 360 RGB - 1566 NOK
Motherboard: MSI Z890 Tomahawk - 3399 NOK
RAM: G.Skill Trident Z5 2x24GB 7200 MT/s CL36 - 2426 NOK
GPU: RTX 5060 Ti 16GB* (about 5700 NOK)
OS drive: WD SN850X 2TB - 1799 NOK
Work/Storage drive: WD SN850X 2TB - 1799 NOK

Total: 24009 NOK

Again this is a rough sketch, the motherboard can be downgraded somewhat and some money can be saved here.
The RAM can also be downgraded to 32 GB and some money can be saved here as well.
The question is what components are going to be augmented with this money? Case and PSU probably.

The cooler is the RGB version as the regular one wasn't available, it's reasonable to expect that one to have a lower price.

The case and the PSU are examples rather than actual recommendations, I was looking mainly for something that loosely fit the bill and at a good price. Obviously a white case isn't going to be an actual recommendation unless the user actively wants that.

I've chosen the exact same drive for OS and storage/work to avoid having different performance, and the SN850X 2TB was the cheapest when comparing to Kingston Fury Renegade, Crucial T500, SK Hynix P41 and Samsung 990 Pro.
Going with a 1TB drive for OS means automatically slightly lower performance when compared to the 2TB version, and combining this 1TB high-tier drive with a 4TB low-tier drive for storage means you gain 1TB of capacity but lose some performance for probably similar price compared to the 2 x 2TB combo above.
But this needs to be explored in greater detail, perhaps there are some drives at certain prices which make the second combo more viable.
And of course going big from the start is always valid, the SN850X 4TB is cheaper than 2 x 2TB. That way you only use a single M.2 slot and leave ample room for future expansion.

The 5060 Ti 16GB is a viable light workstation GPU, you do get an adequate VRAM buffer and the latest technologies, the price can make or break it, if you can get an MSRP-tier model at a close-to-MSRP price then it's fine. Going with 30-series in almost mid-2025 doesn't seem ideal to me, the cards are probably past the warranty period age-wise, and I'm guessing the paste could be degraded somewhat, it never hurts to be sure what you're getting.
I don't know what is the best approach regarding the 5060 Ti, right now retailers are trying to push prices upwards, if the 9060 XT is very close in performance and comes at a lower MSRP ideally the 5060 Ti would drop closer to its own MSRP however it's likely that the retailers are going to pull the 9060 XT closer to it rather than the other way around.

Okay now the platform, I see that 14700K is almost the same price, the 7900X is cheaper and could offer a cheaper overall platform (using an X670 board, so this might be worth exploring) admittedly with somewhat less performance/features, but other CPUs like 9900X, 7950X are more expensive.

So there is room to maneuver, depending on the prices in your country and what offers might turn up the balance might shift more towards AMD or Intel, but both platforms will get the job done, as you can see from the reviews.
 
There were a lot of technical things here that I've got no clue about.
We are not here to confuse or tell you how to work so whatever confusing parts in your blind spot need to be considered. Take your time.
At the same time, I'm a guy that thinks too much telling you that you're probably overthinking this by a lot.
Being in the market for a new workstation is unusual. Those of us that build will retire the old PC as a server or editor workstation.
I will certainly not be having anything "industrial" stuff, meaning that I will not require a server etc. to be happy with what I will be doing.
This part is fine. Hardware is hardware is hardware...But there's a bit to consider with human elements and it's difficult to explain.
OS drive
Work/Storage drive
This part right here, super important. How you arrange disks/volumes is up to you but keep this line of separation between work and personal.
I'm sure neither one of you need to hear it but somebody in here does. It's not as simple as inbox/outbox if you're juggling sensitive information.
It's also important to consider what that means. If you're just entering the digital work space it won't seem important but you will need to deal with it.

A server is a major security luxury. On a normal gaming computer, it's usually just games and some personal stuff.
On a professional/special purpose system, the risk assessment is much lower thanks to role separation.
On an editor/developer/production machine, the configuration is permanent. No updates, instability or weirdness.
Not everybody needs the server and in your case that's great but keep in mind that can impact price and workflow.
The point of this post was to see which CPU type I should go for, AMD or Intel, how much RAM I would need, which mobo that will "survive" for a while, appropriate PSU and how much storage I would need.
If you're making 1080p videos in Vegas, Premiere or whatever toolkit and your workflow is just one screen, any old gaming PC loadout can work.
8 years ago I was doing that on an AMD Phenom II X4 955 with 8GB. It's not great today but back then, this was my main VR kit. Think about that.

If you're editing 4K videos with a proper multi-display workflow, literally any old 8c or modern 6c CPU will carry but a modern 12-16c will shine.
Go to the mid-range page on CPUBenchmark and pick anything that clocks above 9K pts. A lot of these are core heavy and super cheap.
My production box is an AMD FX-8370 that clocks in at 6300pts. Not only is this okay for my needs but the workflow is great.

You are spoiled for choice and then there's the high end page.
My Ryzen 5 3600 is a 6c/12t part still listed on there and clocks in ~18100pts, which might be a reasonable performance bar.
The average Ryzen 9 9950X is more than double the cores+threads and clocks in at 67200pts. It is pointless to worry about this.
You might notice I lean heavily AMD and that's just my preference. I usually compete with Intel gaming builds and they have issues.
RAM: I will have no less than 32GB, for sure. 32GB seems to be sufficient enough for my purposes. Maybe 64GB if I can fit it within my budget.
My Ryzen box started as a 32GB system and this was the jump I made from 16GB on the FX.
Both were VR systems and the jump to 64GB made sense because of apps with horrific memory leaks.
You will not need 64GB until you have a VERY memory hungry workflow.
Could be Premiere, DaVinci, OBS, maybe Unity or Blender all running together.
Realistically the most I've ever used was 48GB and that was after 12hrs of steady memory leak.
This was long before I was looking into anything live production. 1080p editing was perfectly fine.
It seems though that 12GB is preferred memory for a GPU for my purposes. A silent one would also be very preferable, but I can sacrifice a bit quietness vs. more power and efficiency.
A low-pro 3060 would make my situation easier but I would gain nothing from it other than vram and display outs (that I don't need). It might be ideal for you.
If you're really clever and pick an Intel CPU or modern AMD with an iGPU, you could pick up a cheap Tesla P100 or newer and run that as your video accelerator.
Again, options plentiful for your very specific use case.
I see that for the you lot suggest 2TB M.2 storages, so I assume that 1 is a Windows-dedicated one, while the other is for the content storage, yes? How many M.2 storages can I fit onto 1 mobo?
Volume arrangement is up to you but M.2 needs PCI-E lanes, which are a precious resource on consumer CPU+board combos.
I can run a pair of gen4 M.2 drives on my Ryzen box with a GPU and network accelerator before I've maxxed out all lanes.
There are more lanes available on workstation CPU+board combos but most of those loadouts are cost prohibitive.
When I install a pair of M.2 drives in this system, it will be a 500GB pair of Crucial P310s running RAID0.
PSU: I should got for 750-850W it seems, according to what you guys have suggested. Any more seems to be overkill.
It's probably fine but if you ever need to change to something much more power hungry that suggests "750W" minimums, go higher.
I have a 750W box from 2009 with a 25A power rail and a much more recent 1KW box that can deliver upwards of 83A.
It doesn't matter on low power draw cards but the moment you switch to anything high power, there could be issues just reaching POST.
The power supply thing is a gigantic autistic rabbit hole that probably got me twice this past year.
You'll figure it out.
 
For software: Since DaVinci Resolve will be my preferred video editor (since I do not know of any other FREE (no trial) video editing softwares), I will go with that. I used to be familiar with Capcut until it was no longer free.
davinci resolve can benefit greatly from a powerful nvidia video card .
so even something like 5060Ti (16gb edition) would be justified and it fits the budget .
as for the cpu you can go with cheaper core 7 265K(F) - it will get the job done and it cuts the overall price down nicely .


CPU cooler: This one seems to be an easy choice: Arctic Liquid Freezer III. It's what my friend also has, and he is very happy with it.
you can save a lot of money on the cooler , for 265K(F) you don´t need a $150 AIO .
something like endorfy fortis 5 costs 3x less money and will run this processor cool and quiet .



RAM: I will have no less than 32GB, for sure. 32GB seems to be sufficient enough for my purposes. Maybe 64GB if I can fit it within my budget.
my advice is to get as much as you can right off the bat 48gb or 64gb ideally .


Case: It'll either be a be quiet or a Fractal Design. I have experiences with FD since it's what my friend also has, and they are very quiet and "padded".
if you want quiet i would stick to the older fractal case with heavy paddings and thick metal side pannels (R5 is available even in norway for a decent enough price)
new pop silent cases from fractal are not nearly as good (and they also have terrible thermal tests results)



my updated build:


PCPartPicker Part List

CPU: Intel Core Ultra 7 265K 3.9 GHz 20-Core Processor (kr4768.00 @ Proshop)
CPU Cooler: ENDORFY Fortis 5 CPU Cooler (kr681.00 @ Proshop)
Motherboard: MSI MAG Z890 TOMAHAWK WIFI ATX LGA1851 Motherboard (kr3399.00 @ Proshop)
Memory: G.Skill Trident Z5 RGB 48 GB (2 x 24 GB) DDR5-7200 CL36 Memory (kr2426.00 @ Proshop)
Storage: Western Digital WD Blue SN5000 2 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive (kr1522.00 @ Proshop)
Storage (for operating system): Western Digital WD_BLACK SN7100 2 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive (kr1690.00 @ Proshop)
Video Card: Palit Infinity 3 OC GeForce RTX 5060 Ti 16 GB Video Card (kr6190.00 @ Proshop)
Case: Fractal Design Define R5 ATX Mid Tower Case (kr1771.00 @ Proshop)
Power Supply: Montech TITAN GOLD 850W 850 W 80+ Gold Certified Fully Modular ATX Power Supply (kr1799.00 @ Proshop)
Total: kr24246.00
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2025-04-22 08:51 CEST+0200
 
OK, I updated my list and tried to bear in all the comments on this thread in mind. I did put a 1TB drive for the OS and a 4TB drive for storage. I looked at going with 2-2TB drives, but the single 4TB was cheaper. I picked the Silent Base 802 because it comes with 3 140mm fans that are good airflow fans to start with. If you ever needed more or a different noise/airflow profile you could swap them out for (or add some) Silent Wings 4 fans that are really good. I would put the AIO radiator in the top and have at least 2 of those other fans in the front. It might even be worth it to just put all three in the front with the 3 radiator fans exhausting out the top. For that CPU, you could also go with a 280mm radiator and likely be perfectly fine, but I would only do that if you find a case you like that fits the 280mm in the top. I love be quiet! cases and you'll have to go with one of the most expensive ones if you want support for the 140mm-fan-radiators in the top. I like the sound profile of 140mm fans much better than 120mm fans, but having the 360mm radiator that probably won't ever work terribly hard exhausting from the top will likely be plenty quiet.

As for the memory, the pricing is a little higher for a 64GB kit that isn't quite as fast (but possibly has just as low latency), so you could consider with your software and use-case whether it's better to have slightly more RAM or to have the better bandwidth (higher speed). I'm not sure the 6800 vs. 6000 is going to make a huge difference, but I haven't kept up to date on how easy it is to drop faster RAM into any motherboard for LGA-1851 or how much that would matter to you, so I tried to just pick a good bang/buck kit.

On the motherboard, it's a B860, uATX. The micro-ATX part wasn't the goal, but it comes with one more m.2 slot than any of the other boards in this price-range and all but one slot have a built-in heatsink as part of the motherboard. When you look at faster m.2 SSDs these days, they pretty much all need some sort of heatsinking, so you either need the motherboard to have those heatsinks, or you have to try to pick and choose where the SSD heatsink that comes with the SSD isn't going to interfere with the GPU or something, which is often impossible based on where they put things. I know not everybody is happy putting a uATX motherboard in a full ATX case, but I did it for years because they had the features I wanted at the price I wanted to pay. It seems to have changed here and there between generations and platforms, also sometimes the uATX boards are more expensive because they don't sell as many it seems, but looking through the list of what's available in Norway, it seemed like you'd have to spend quite a bit more to get the features this board has in a full ATX motherboard.

PCPartPicker Part List

CPU: Intel Core Ultra 7 265K 3.9 GHz 20-Core Processor (kr4768.00 @ Proshop)
CPU Cooler: ARCTIC Liquid Freezer III 360 A-RGB 48.82 CFM Liquid CPU Cooler (kr1566.00 @ Proshop)
Motherboard: ASRock B860M Lightning WiFi Micro ATX LGA1851 Motherboard (kr2707.00 @ Proshop)
Memory: G.Skill Trident Z5 RGB 48 GB (2 x 24 GB) DDR5-6800 CL34 Memory (kr2245.00 @ Proshop)
Storage: Samsung 990 Pro 1 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive (kr1290.00 @ Proshop)
Storage: Samsung 990 Pro 4 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive (kr3590.00 @ Proshop)
Video Card: Palit Infinity 3 OC GeForce RTX 5060 Ti 16 GB Video Card (kr6190.00 @ Proshop)
Case: be quiet! Silent Base 802 ATX Mid Tower Case (kr2142.00 @ Proshop)
Power Supply: be quiet! Straight Power 12 750 W 80+ Platinum Certified Fully Modular ATX Power Supply (kr2068.00 @ Proshop)
Total: kr26566.00
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available
Generated by PCPartPicker 2025-04-22 15:35 CEST+0200
 
I have carefully designed a build too, with a complete focus on noise floor:

PCPartPicker Part List

CPU: Intel Core Ultra 9 285 2.5 GHz 24-Core Processor (€569.00 @ Amazon Deutschland)
CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-P1 Fanless CPU Cooler (€118.90 @ Alza)
Motherboard: Asus PRIME B860M-K Micro ATX LGA1851 Motherboard (€141.90 @ Computeruniverse)
Memory: G.Skill Trident Z5 RGB 32 GB (2 x 16 GB) DDR5-8000 CL38 Memory (€170.89 @ Alternate)
Storage: Western Digital Blue SN580 2 TB M.2-2280 PCIe 4.0 X4 NVME Solid State Drive (€108.90 @ Alza)
Video Card: Palit Infinity 3 GeForce RTX 5070 12 GB Video Card (€599.00 @ Amazon Deutschland)
Case: Cooler Master Silencio S400 MicroATX Mini Tower Case (€92.89 @ Computeruniverse)
Power Supply: Asus ROG LOKI 750 W 80+ Platinum Certified Fully Modular SFX Power Supply (€161.16 @ Galaxus)
Case Fan: Noctua S12B redux-700 33.49 CFM 120 mm Fan (€14.90 @ Amazon Deutschland)
Case Fan: Noctua S12B redux-700 33.49 CFM 120 mm Fan (€14.90 @ Amazon Deutschland)
Case Fan: Noctua S12B redux-700 33.49 CFM 120 mm Fan (€14.90 @ Amazon Deutschland)
Total: €2007.34
Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available

Generated by PCPartPicker 2025-04-22 16:49 CEST+0200


Non-K processor with optimized wattage. Fanless heatsink, special noise-isolated case to muffle the few fans that must be present. Generously sized power supply with fan stop to help minimize noise emissions here. Noise-optimized fans for the case. Temps won't be the greatest, but this machine is as close to silent as I can envision while retaining a decent level of performance.

Targeting 2000€, which is your smaller budget number. Good luck!
 
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