Will these parts be compatible with eachother?

EoinIRL

Honorable
Dec 3, 2013
44
0
10,530
These are the parts
LiteOn IHAS124-04 24x SATA Half Height Internal DVDRW Drive - Black

Western Digital 1TB internal Hard Drive - Caviar Blue (3.5 inch)

Crucial BLS8G3D1609ES2LX0CEU 8GB 1600MHz CL9 DDR3 Ballistix Sport Single Memory Module

Corsair Builder Series CX 430 Watt ATX/EPS 80 PLUS Bronze Power Supply Unit

AMD Athlon X4 760k Black Edition Quad Processor (Socket FM2, 3.8GHz, 4MB, 100W, AD760kWOHLBOX, Richland, Turbo Core 3.0 Technology, Virtualization Technology)

MSI A78M-E35 Mini-ATX Motherboard (AMD FM2+ A78, 2x DDR3, 4x USB 3, E LAN, HDMI, DVI)

Fractal Design Core 1000 Series Micro ATX Case - Black Pearl

EVGA 02G-P4-3657-KR GeForce GTX 650Ti Boost Nvidia Graphics Card (2GB, GDDR5, PCI-Express 3.0, 192-Bit)

Also the 650TI Boost is going out of stock quickly so will this work If I switch to a R9 260X?
 

Boss Cat Johnson

Honorable
Dec 15, 2013
124
0
10,760
PCPartPicker part list / Price breakdown by merchant / Benchmarks

CPU Cooler: Cooler Master Hyper 212 EVO 82.9 CFM Sleeve Bearing CPU Cooler ($29.98 @ OutletPC)
Memory: Corsair Vengeance 8GB (2 x 4GB) DDR3-1600 Memory ($89.99 @ Amazon)
Video Card: EVGA GeForce GTX 660 2GB Video Card ($179.99 @ Microcenter)
Power Supply: XFX 650W 80+ Bronze Certified ATX Power Supply ($86.98 @ SuperBiiz)
Total: $386.94
(Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when available.)
(Generated by PCPartPicker 2014-01-03 02:37 EST-0500)

I don't know your budget but here are the changes i would make. Aftermarket CPU cooler so you can overclock that K series processor. 2 sticks of ram to take advantage of dual channel like BN91 said. The GTX 660 might be a little easier to find and is slightly faster than the 650ti, if your budget allows i would go with a 760. Then lastly a very good PSU to top it all off.