1.5 Upgrading a PC
Sometimes it's sensible to upgrade a PC. Other times,
it's not. Whether it is economically feasible to
upgrade a particular PC depends largely on how old the PC is, its
existing configuration, and what you expect it to do.
PCs less than a year or two old are usually easy to upgrade.
Components are readily available and sell at market prices. Necessary
BIOS upgrades and firmware revisions are easy to obtain. PCs more
than two or three years old are harder and more expensive to upgrade.
Necessary components, particularly
memory
and
BIOS
upgrades, may be difficult or impossible to obtain. Even if you can
obtain them, they may be unreasonably expensive. Upgrading one item
often uncovers a serious bottleneck elsewhere, and so on. In general,
restrict older PCs—say anything older than a Pentium III or
late-model Celeron system—to minor upgrades such as adding
memory or replacing a hard disk. Although you
can do significant upgrades on older systems, it
seldom makes economic sense to do so. If an older PC requires more
than minor upgrades to meet your expected needs for the next year or
so, it's probably not a good upgrade candidate.
The reason most people upgrade their PCs is to improve performance.
The good news is that there are several relatively inexpensive
upgrades that may yield noticeable performance increases. The bad
news is that some are easier than others, and that doing all of them
can easily cost as much or more than simply buying a new PC.
- Processor
-
Upgrading the
processor
improves overall system performance. In general, upgrade only within
the same generation, for example, a Pentium II/266 to a
Celeron/500, or a Pentium 133 to a
K6-2/400. Avoid upgrade kits that jump generations, e.g., kits to
upgrade a 486 to Pentium, or a Pentium to Pentium II. These kits are
usually expensive, provide limited performance improvements, and are
often plagued with compatibility problems. If you upgrade within the
same generation, you may have to upgrade your BIOS at the same time
(usually a free download), and you may have to buy an adapter (for
example, to install a Socket 370 Celeron in an older Slot 1
motherboard). In general, newer systems are easy to upgrade, and
older systems are more difficult (or impossible) to upgrade.
Upgrading processors is covered in Chapter 4.
Cost: $30 to $200 (although you can spend much more). Difficulty:
Easy to difficult, depending on the system and the processor.
- L2 cache
-
Modern processors (Pentium II/III/4, Celeron, Athlon, Duron) have
L2 cache
built into the processor package. Old Socket 7 processors (Pentium,
K6/K6-2) depend on discrete L2 cache that resides on the motherboard.
On such systems, particularly if little or no L2 cache is already
installed, adding L2 cache may provide a 10% to 25% boost in overall
system performance. Upgrading L2 cache is covered in Chapter 3 and Chapter 5. Cost: $25 to
$50. Difficulty: Easy to moderate, depending on the type of L2 cache
the motherboard accepts. Note, however, that fifth-generation systems
with discrete L2 cache are now so old that it seldom makes sense to
spend even $25 upgrading them.
- Memory
-
If your PC does not have at least 64 MB (Windows 95/98/Me), 128 MB
(NT/2000), or 256 MB (XP) of RAM, adding RAM is the most
cost-effective upgrade you can make. Additional
memory
improves overall system performance, sometimes dramatically. Adding
memory beyond 96 MB for 95/98/Me, 128 MB for NT/2000, or 256 MB for
XP results in decreasing returns. The downsides are that many older
systems do not cache memory above 64 MB (check the
motherboard/chipset manual), which means that increasing memory
beyond 64 MB can actually decrease performance,
and that you may be sinking money into an obsolete form of memory
that cannot be migrated later to a new system. Upgrading memory is
covered in Chapter 5. Cost: $25 to $150 (varies
with memory size and price). Difficulty: Usually easy, although
physical access on some older systems is difficult, and the correct
memory may be hard to find and expensive.
- CD-ROM
-
If you use your CD-ROM drive only for installing software and
listening to music, even an original 1X model suffices. But if you
use your CD-ROM
drive for playing games, accessing large databases, or ripping audio
CDs to MP3 format, you'll want a better drive.
Recent 32X and faster IDE models are inexpensive and easy to install.
However, rather than installing a new CD-ROM drive, consider
installing a CD writer and/or a DVD-ROM drive. Upgrading CD-ROM
drives is covered in Chapter 10. Cost: $50.
Difficulty: Easy.
- Hard disk
-
Modern hard disks are huge, fast, and inexpensive. Upgrading the
hard disk
not only provides additional storage space, but can dramatically
increase performance if you run applications that access the disk
frequently. Older systems cannot recognize large hard disks, but that
problem can be gotten around by using a device driver (usually
included with the new drive), by installing a BIOS upgrade, or by
replacing the embedded
IDE interface with an expansion card
($25 to $50) that supports large drives. Upgrading hard disks is
covered in Chapter 13 and Chapter 14. Cost: $75 to $250. Difficulty: Easy,
except for problems migrating existing programs and data.
- Video adapter
-
Video
adapter technology improves almost from month to month. Even so, if
you use your system primarily for word processing, email, web
browsing, and similar functions, you won't get much
benefit from upgrading to a new video adapter. But if you play 3D
games and your video card is more than a year or so old, upgrading to
a more recent model can provide dramatic performance benefits.
Although it seldom makes sense to install the latest, fastest video
adapter in an older system, installing a mid-range current video card
can boost performance at small cost. Upgrading video adapters is
covered in Chapter 15. Cost: $50 to $200.
Difficulty: Easy to moderate.
- Monitor
-
Although CRT
monitors
are a mature technology, manufacturing improvements and other factors
have resulted in dramatic price reductions on larger models. Not long
ago, 15" monitors were the norm and 17" monitors sold for $750.
Nowadays, decent 17" monitors cost $150 and 19" monitors $300. If you
spend a lot of time in front of your PC, buying a bigger monitor may
be the best upgrade you can make. Also, unlike most upgrades, a good
monitor is a long-term asset. You can use it with your current
system, your next system, and probably the next system after that.
Upgrading monitors is covered in Chapter 16. Cost:
$150 to $700. Difficulty: Easy.
- Power supply
-
Although it may seem strange to include power
supplies in the performance upgrade category, the fact is that many
systems have inadequate power supplies, and replacing the original
unit with a better unit can improve system performance and stability.
Upgrading power supplies is covered in Chapter 26.
Cost: typically $45 to $125. Difficulty: Easy.
Another reason to upgrade a PC is to add missing features. Here are
some common feature upgrades:
- CD writer
-
A CD writer allows you to burn your own CDs, which can subsequently
be read in any recent CD-ROM drive. CD writers are popular for making
archival backups and, of course, are used by many people to make
pirated copies of data and audio CDs. Adding a CD writer is covered
in Chapter 11. Cost: $100 to $250. Difficulty: Easy
for IDE drives, easy to moderate for SCSI drives.
- DVD-ROM drive or DVD writer
-
A DVD-ROM drive allows you to watch DVD movies on your PC and to
access the increasing number of databases and games supplied on DVD.
DVD-ROM drives can also read data and audio CDs, so they are becoming
a popular replacement for CD-ROM drives. DVD writers are to DVD-ROM
drives as CD writers are to CD-ROM drives. In addition to playing
back video, audio, or data DVD-ROM discs, a DVD writer can write
large amounts of data to a removable disc or cartridge that costs $3
to $40. Adding a DVD-ROM drive or DVD writer is covered in Chapter 12. Cost: $85 to $250 (DVD-ROM) or $450 to $750
(DVD writer). Difficulty: Easy for IDE drives, easy to moderate for
SCSI drives.
- Tape drive
-
The downside of huge, cheap modern hard disks is that there is no
practical means to back them up short of installing a
tape drive. Tape
drives store huge amounts of data—up to 50 GB or more—on
relatively inexpensive tape cartridges. Adding a tape drive is
covered in Chapter 9. Cost: $200 to $900.
Difficulty: Easy for IDE drives, easy to moderate for SCSI drives.
- Sound card and speakers
-
If you make no serious demands on the audio capabilities of your PC,
the inexpensive
sound card
and speakers that
probably came with it are usable. But PC audio hardware and
applications are advancing faster than any component except video
adapters, and there are a lot of fascinating new applications,
including 3D gaming with positional audio, DVD playback, IP
telephony, voice-recognition software, and so on. To use any of these
new applications, you may need to replace your sound card and perhaps
your speakers. Adding a sound card and speakers is covered in
Chapter 17 and Chapter 18. Cost: $50 to $400. Difficulty: Easy, except for
potential conflicts with improperly uninstalled drivers from the
original sound card.
- Game controller
-
Years ago, people bemoaned the fact that PC games were not up to the standards
of arcade games or dedicated game machines like those from Sega,
Sony, and others. Dramatic improvements in PC video and audio mean
that nowadays the situation is exactly reversed. The best games run
on PCs, the Sony PlayStation series and Microsoft X-Box
notwithstanding. But getting the most from those games requires
adding dedicated game controller hardware. Adding a game controller
is covered in Chapter 21. Cost: $10 to $150.
Difficulty: Easy.
The ultimate upgrade, of course, is to replace the
motherboard,
which in effect means building an entirely new PC. Before you
undertake a motherboard upgrade, consider whether you might not do
better to retire your current PC to other duties and buy or build a
new system. If you do replace the motherboard, expect to pay $85 to
$250 for the motherboard itself, but also plan to spend another $50
to $1,000 to replace processor, memory, and perhaps other components,
depending on how much can be salvaged from the current system.
Difficulty: Easy to moderate (although it may be time-consuming) if
you have some experience working on PCs. Moderate to difficult if you
don't.
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