Category: Garage Sale
Take your gaming to the next level with this Cybertron Hellion GM1213 desktop. Has upgrades that will make gaming more enjoyable! With 16 GB of installed ram, 4 terrabytes of storage, and a crucial 256 GB solid-state drive with Win 8.1 as the boot drive, this machine is ready for anything you throw at it. Plus, with it's AMD hexa-core processor, you can ensure that your games and other programs will run smoothly.
Tech Specs:
Processor: AMD hexa-core at 3.5 GHZ
Memory: 16 GB installed; max supported 32 GB Hard drives: 1 Crucial 256 GB SSD, has win 8.1 on this drive, activated and freshly installed. Hard Drives: Tosheba 1 TB and Western Digital 3 TB, bringing the total to nearly 4 TB. Video Card: NVIDIA G-force GT750T Comes with a complete recovery of win 8.1 on discs. Product key is on sticker on side of computer. 2 USB ports in front, six fans, headphone/microphone jack, supports 5.1 and 7.1 surround sound formats. Built-in WIFI 802.11 B, G, N. Network Jack. Many other USB ports in back. Condition is like-new; one metal piece is missing from side of case; does not affect performance at all. Manual, win 8.1 recovery discs, and extra mounting hard drive trays are included. Has red/blue lights; fans as well as lights can be adjusted.
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I could build something like that for 700 that could probs perform better. sorry bro
Why would anyone want something with a metal piece missing, when they could easily get such a computer with the piece on for $300 less?
If you purchased a computer for $300.00, and you are blind or visually impaired, any screen reader would run horribly. As to Liquid Tension's comment, I guarantee you couldn't build this for $700.00. Alone, the crucial solid-state drive was $120.00, and the two hard drives were the same price, not to mention Win 8.1 which is around $119.00, a case, which can be purchased from cheap to expensive, depending on the expansion you want, a wi-fi card, a graphics card, ranging anywhere from $150.00 to over $500.00 for a Titan series. Then, you have to purchase the ram, which is around $100 for 8 GB, not 16. Then, you have to purchase a Motherboard/processor combo. You couldn't put this together for the price you are quoting at all. The metal piece you are referring to is on the side of the computer's outer case and doesn't affect its performance. Trust me, it will sell. Maybe not on this site, as people always seem to think they could build a computer cheaper or whatever, but it will sell to the right person. I'd like to see your build, all priced out. Prove me wrong.
Yeah, , Got to be honest, I've seen people selling computers with better processors and 960 M graphics cards, for 800.
for one thousand you could, if you shopped carefully online, create something with a 970 M in it, and an older core I7 or newer i5.
You'd have to do the work yourself, but seriously man. That's not really the best deal out there. Plus, its damaged.
Plus, for serious gaming most of those AMD processers in that range are underpowered.
Not to mention, you're trying to sell this for the price of new. When its been used.
Honestly, the second HD was a waste of money.
keeping the 16 gb of ram in there makes it harder to really step up to something grate, but you could upgrade the processor, or video card, at least...
the 750T isn't really future proofed at all.
Maybe i'll do a build to compare, but its honestly a lot of work, to make a point.
But TLDR... For the money you're asking someone to pay, particularly if they are buying *used* gear, they could do a lot better by shopping around on ebay, Neweegg, , tiger direct, amazon, etc...
I don't know why you would have spent $120 on hard drives. You can get new Samsung 256 gb EVO 850s on ebay for 99.99, sometimes cheeper.
Same goes for spinning drives... You got ripped off, hardcore.
So, even if you wanted 3 hard drives, you could still shave off minimum $60.00.
Or, buy a 4 TB desktop harddrive for a little over 100.Saving you even more money you could have spent on a processor and better video card.
Before I finally got my gaming laptop, I did months of research on gaming desktops and laptops... This build just isn't economical, or future proofed, if you're going to do some serious gaming.
IF you're just doing light stuff, its ok, but you still could have easily saved yourself between 60 and 300 dollars. depending on where you shopped.
When you open the carton on a computer, you just about lose half it value.
Buying high powered computers are for keeps, not resale.
You just can't get much for a used system.
This one, if it was ment, might fetch 500 600 tops.
The absolute lowest price I'd take for this would be $700.00
The processor can be overclocked actually to 4.00 GHZ if one knows how to do it. I don't do serious gaming at all. Most people or at least some buy gaming computers because they are supposedly more powerful. I haven't had any issues with it really. It's a small metal piece. On the side of a case. That doesn't affect performance. I don't trust buying hard drives off EBay.
Ebay dealers are as good as anyone depending on their ratings.
Most products purchased from the better dealers, are under factory warrentee just like anyother person you buy from.
Many Ebay dealers also sell on Amazon, and other places too.
If you receive a product purchased on Ebay that isn't what it is suppose to be, Ebay refunds your total purchase price, and shipping.
They also ditch the dealers.
Ebay, also is not the cheapest place to buy, it just depends.
Exactly, but I listed several sources one could source parts from.
and as wayne said, its all about someones reputation score. The big problem with the a6 and a8 is the cash. Its just not good. For anything more than entry gaming.
These processors just don't do well with many threaded applications and calculations. But in this case, Wayne is probably correct. 6 to 700 is about what you'd get.
That'd be fine. I'll take whatever price, within reason, I get for it. I just don't need all these desktops anymore, and want someone else to get use out of them. I'd take $600.00 for the gaming PC, and even include a free desktop, too. I just want these things gone. Guess I should list on EBay.
Yeah, what i'd do, is list at $725 OBO, with free shipping.
Sure, that sounds decent.
Add or best offer, see what you get.
I'd ship UPS or Fed Ex I think.
Cheaper.
This is now on EBay. For dix hundred.
If anyone is still interested in this, I would like $520.00
What I'm curious about is how and why you came to have your hands on so much tech when you don't want it anymore and/or never had much use for it. You have a gaming PC but never really do high-end games. Also, it ought to be said that a blind user's gaming PC doesn't need to be near as strong as a sighted gamer's PC. Having more isn't a bad thing, necessarily, but the premium on that amount of sheer processing power is perhaps not so high.
When one is in college and has lots of money on hand, they tend to buy toys.
They play with them for a while, decide they don't need them, and so.
Cool.
Wayne, I don't have lots of money, quite the contrary. Actually, the reason for selling the pc is to get out of a debt that I owe. Have someone from Craigs List interested. Because, computers are fun, but just too expensive of a hobby for me. I have a Thinkpad, I don't need all of this tech anymore.
You have enough money, and lots to most.
If not, you'd not be having things up for sale.
You have to buy them first, right?
That cost money. Smile.
Be happy, and enjoy it while you can.
Soon as you get responsibilities, the fun is harder unless you generate lots, or have benefactors.
When I was in college, I had toys. Not like you, but most anything I wanted.
Mainly stereo stuff, and music.
No harm in enjoying life. Smile.
Well said.