Is this a good investment

Donald_11Bravo

Estimable
Sep 17, 2015
8
0
4,510
Is this a good investment
I am in college and like gaming but am new to laptop builds. I hope that this setup will last a few years. or am I wasting my money. any opinion will help.
Sager
NP8652-S Notebook
$2605
Components
- 15.6" 4K QFHD Sharp Display with Matte Finished Surface (3840x2160)
- Guaranteed no dead or partially-lit pixels for first 30 days of purchasing
- Nvidia GeForce GTX 980M GPU with 4GB GDDR5 Video Memory
- 4th Generation Intel® Core™ i7-4720HQ Processor ( 6MB L3 Cache, 2.60GHz)
- IC Diamond Thermal Compound - CPU + GPU
- Windows® 10 Home 64-Bit Edition Preinstalled
- Windows® 10 64-Bit Edition USB Recovery Media [+$25.00]
- 32GB Kingston HyperX CL9 Dual Channel DDR3 SDRAM at 1600MHz - 4 X 8GB [+$180.00]
- 500GB Samsung 850 EVO M.2 SSD - as an OS Drive (Primary Drive C) [+$85.00]
- 500GB Samsung 850 EVO Series SATA3 Solid State Disk Drive [+$165.00]
- Killer™ Dual Band Wireless-AC 1525 M.2 AC Wireless LAN + Bluetooth Module [+$20.00]
- Smart Polymer Battery Pack (4 Cell, 60WH)
- Fingerprint Reader


Software & Services
- Microsoft Home & Student Office 2013 ( Includes Word, Excel, PowerPoint and OneNote. ) [+$145.00]
 
Solution


Keep the M2 as your OS drive and replace the second SSD with a 1TB HDD. That should save you a lot and give you more space for stuff.
32 GB of ram is insane, half that to 16gb and you're still more than fine. Also why do you need 2 SSD's? I would drop 1 and make it a 1TB+ HDD. Both of those should save you at least $200.
 


Keep the M2 as your OS drive and replace the second SSD with a 1TB HDD. That should save you a lot and give you more space for stuff.
 
Solution
Dropped me down to about $2500
is 512GB overkill as OS drive or would 256GB suffice
- 16GB Kingston HyperX CL9 Dual Channel DDR3 SDRAM at 1600MHz - 2 X 8GB
- 512GB Samsung SM951 M.2 PCIe SSD - as an OS Drive (Primary Drive C) [+$330.00]
-1TB 7200rpm SATA2 Hard Drive
 


256 is fine. I run a 128gb drive with no issues, Windows and Office are not that big.
 
Beware that the laptop may not allow you to select the M.2 SSD as your boot drive.

If that is the case then you need to use a program like EasyBCD to do so. It is free for personal use. Just click the "See Plans" button.

http://neosmart.net/EasyBCD/
 


From Sager Website:

500GB Samsung 850 EVO M.2 SSD - as an OS Drive (Primary Drive C)

Its right in their configuration options.

http://www.sagernotebook.com/customize.php?productid=732