Hi Bob. I'm toying with the same idea in the next couple of months but I'm also a bit out of touch with the very latest technology. The current edition of PC Pilot (Nov/Dec) has a five page article dedicated to us - helpfully entitled 'What is the best computer for running Microsoft's Flight Simulator?'
I've no idea how accurate all this is, I'm only repeating what the article says. One would imagine they have some experience to draw on!
It starts off by suggesting that it's not as simple as just buying the most powerful PC you can afford as FSX won't utilise all of it - after all it was designed for older architecture and released in 2006. For instance it's only designed to be run on one core so speed is more important than the number of processor cores. Similarly it won't use more than one video card so a dual GPU system would be a waste of money if you only want to run FSX.
This is what they recommend. An i7 chip with a liquid cooling system in a x-58 compatible motherboard utilising triple channel memory. They recommend Asus or EVGA boards. An Nvidia GTX 480 graphics card. 6-8 Gb of DDR3 memory (Corsair Dominator or Kingston HyperX). An SSD drive will give the fastest transfer speeds by a long way but a Western Digital Velociraptor 10,000 rpm drive is a good compromise if you can't afford one. Also a high output power supply will be essential for that lot. They recommend that 800-1200w should be futureproof. For the OS they reckon XP will become increasingly difficult to support, Vista is to be avoided of course and they feel that Windows 7 is the best OS for FSX.
Well, I haven't added that lot up yet but I would guess it's £1200-£1500 plus a monitor.
The machines close to this spec currently listed at the top of PC Advisor magazine's chart are: Arbico Elite, Eclipse Armageddon, DinoPC Maxosaur and CyberPower Infinity. obviously you can customise the specs on their websites to get a total price for your desired spec.
Hope this helps
Ian
