Folding Rig October 2010

If you're seriously considering building an entire PC just for folding, then you're clearly not going to settle for doing it in a half-baked way. While the recommendations for the awesome folding farm can be applied when choosing hardware for an everyday PC, this system is for maximum ppd per pound per watt.

After discovering what graphics card is best for folding, our folding rig offers the best balance between ppd, cost and energy consumption. If you don't know what folding is all about, it's a distributed computing application that aims to model how proteins fold, thus delivering useful simulation data for scientists to use in the fight against several diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's disease. The project is run by Stanford University and has made significant progress, as you can read from Folding@home's peer-reviewed research papers.

The genius of f@h is that it's competitive, with a leaderboard and teams. To help us in our quest to be the most productive folders on the planet, join our team by using the team ID of 35947. Cheers!

 Folding Rig
 ProductUK Price (inc VAT)US Price (ex tax)
Graphics Card(s)4 x 768MB Nvidia GeForce GTX 4604 x £1204 x 170
CoolingAntec Big Boy 200mm fan£20$20
MotherboardMSI 890FXA-GD70£140$200
CPU2.8GHz AMD Athlon II X2 240£45$60
Memory2GB 1,333MHz DDR3£45$50
PSU (UK)Enermax Revolution 85+ ERV1250EWT£230NA
PSU (US)Enermax Revolution 85+ ERV1050EWTNA$290
CaseNone£0$0
CPU Cooler (UK)Akasa AK-876£15NA
CPU Cooler (US)Arctic Cooling Freezer 64 Pro(£15)$30
Storage (HDD)160GB SATA 3Gbps£30$40
 Overall Price:£1,005$1,370

New This Month

There's good news this month for dedicated folders, as our favourite folding GPU, the Nvidia GeForce GTX 460 768MB, has dropped dramatically in price. It’s great when we see a good old price war on a component that’s actually worth talking about. As a result, you can now pick up GTX 460 768MBs for as little as £120 (though we have seen some as low as £113) which is a hefty saving over the £150 they were a month ago.

This is great value when you consider that these are one of the most power-efficient folders at the moment, delivering 56 points per pound and 46 points per watt. Four GTX 460s should generate around 34,500ppd. However, these cards also mean that you need a motherboard with space for four dual-slot graphics cards and a PSU that's got eight 6-pin PCI-E power connectors.

PC Hardware Buyer's Guide October 2010 Folding Rig October 2010

Finally of note is the PSU situation. Enermax has discontinued the 1.05kW version of its Revolution 85+ in favour of its new 1.02kW version. As a result, we can’t find any of the 1.05KW models in the UK anymore, though there are a few still floating around in the US market. Given that PSU stability is absolutely critical in a folding farm, especially if you’re running four graphics cards, we simply can’t recommend the 1.02KW version until we’ve tested it ourselves. We’re therefore recommending the 1.25KW PSU of the same range until we can test the 1.02KW model.

And The Rest

The board we've chosen is the MSI 890FXA-GD70, essentially because it works and it has four dual-slot graphics slots. We've gone with a Socket AM3 board because AMD's cheapest current-generation CPU (the Athlon II X2 240) is much cheaper than Intel's cheapest current-generation CPU (the Pentium G6950). If you wanted to run a few of those massive CPU folding cores, you could opt for an LGA1366 board and Core i7 CPU.

PC Hardware Buyer's Guide October 2010 Folding Rig October 2010

The Athlon II X2 240 processor is sufficient to drive data to all four cards - the CPU doesn't need to do that much in reality, and if you're looking for something slightly lower wattage (remember it won't be at full load, so not reaching the TDP) then you can pay more for a energy efficient Athlon II X2 240e, or simply experiment with undervolting any Socket AM3 CPU.

We've used 2GB of the cheapest branded memory we could find, as there's no gain from fast and expensive memory when folding. In fact, a single stick of 2GB DIMM of 1,333MHz DDR3 is fine (we'd have opted for 1,066MHz, but couldn't find any in stock). To cut power consumption, you might consider using low voltage memory, such as a Kingston LoVo kit or some 1.35V OCZ Low Voltage memory but weigh the extra cost of the kit against the power savings before ordering, and also check that your motherboard allows you to apply low memory voltages.

We've forgone the case too, because we're not confident how any on the market would cope with this many graphics cards long term. In place of a case, we've opted for just a simple solution: one huge fan.

PC Hardware Buyer's Guide October 2010 Folding Rig October 2010Sit the 200mm Antec Big Boy on top of the graphics cards and it should stop them roasting to an early death.

We've used this setup in our own labs with seven GeForce 9600 GTs in a single Asus X58 WS motherboard and it's worked perfectly and continuously for almost a year now. If you do have a case to recommend us, please let us know.

A cheap 160GB hard drive from a reputable manufacturer will suffice, since not much storage is needed - simply the OS and the small Folding programs are needed. Using an SSD won't cut much from your power bill, so don't bother with one.

Finally, drop on the same Akasa AK-876 or Arctic Cooling Freezer 64 Pro that we also used in the Affordable All Rounder PC for ample cooling. If you want to save a few quid, the reference AMD cooler will suffice.
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