this post was submitted on 07 Aug 2023
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I am thinking about building a PC oriented towards music production. My current desktop is 10 years old this month and is due to be replaced. Had been considering a Mac Studio but I am having second thoughts given the significant price difference and Apple's expensive storage upgrades.

[https://pcpartpicker.com/user/Legonatic/saved/#view=q8MYXL](Link to list)

I use Ableton Live 10 for my DAW. I have a Scarlett 4i4 audio interface, so no need to add any sound card to the build.

Going for a microATX build to save on physical space. Will also likely add another case fan somewhere. No Windows 11 license listed but I intend to get one. GPU is more for any light video editing or Photoshop I might do, not planning to do much of any gaming.

Any suggestions for improvement on this part list or any thoughts in general?

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[–] Smokeydope@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

This is the equivalent of YouTuber buying a 1500$ Mac pro to do basic video editing. If your only goal is to do music production you don't need these kinds of specs. A 500$ ibuypowerpc would be enough, and you can spend the 700$ on some nice equipment and professional software. Unless youre a hardcore video gamer or into locally hosted AI you don't need to spend more than a few hundred bucks with today's modern hardware. 8gigs of ram an amd processor and a graphics card from this decade will service you just fine. As a music production person your biggest concern isn't processing power but hardware fedelity. You want to spend the big bucks on your synth, cabling, and sound card

[–] Bootheal0179@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

So, the MSI GTX 1650 4Gb is what hardcore gamers are using these days?

My priority would be to put more resources into the audio interface, controllers, and storage. I think you'll be fine with just about any modern build. Maybe lean towards the quietest build you can make.

If you're serious about your work, I would do a separate drive for storage of your media. Keeping the project data off of the OS drive. I'd even do a backup drive. I don't think there will be a performance benefit. I just prefer a neat file system. Especially if you're working with audio clips. Audio files don't take up a crazy amount of space. I feel it's important to have backups if you're collaborating with others.

[–] mrmhm@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The stock CPU cooler should be okay to start but you might start running into thermal problems after an extended period, especially with heavier multi-track projects. YMMV, but if it's in the budget it's nice to have thermal overhead and have it run quieter.

[–] why@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 1 year ago

I'm honestly surprised that it comes with a cooler with a tdp of 65w while the CPU has a tdp of 219w. I definitely expect some thermal throttling.

[–] why@lemmy.sdf.org 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I'm not an expert on DAW software, but iirc, it involves loading a lot os small files, so I'd recommend a PCIe gen 4 ssd with high iops. Something like a WD black sn850x or a Samsung 980 pro.

Also, you should be able to save some bucks on lower wattage PSU. On a side note, what do you need the USB expansion card for? The motherboard comes with some fast USB already. If you do need it, make sure that the slot on the motherboard is electrically wired up with the same amount of PCIe lanes. On an another note, I'm not sure where the sweet spot of ram speed is on intel, but on AMD it is 6000 and Intel is higher than that. So you might want to get some higher speed ram as well.