Khugan :
jossrik :
Here's the list, not sure which one you have, it might be a good one, and for all we know could last years or more, but you can get a good Tier 1/1A, 2 PSU for a decent to great price if you watch the sales.
This is my current PSU, and I will study your link. Thanks!
@nikoli707 you are correct, I don't plan to OC now. I am hoping stock cooling is enough, but I do want the option for down the road. My previous buld lasted since 2008, so I want this one to last at least as long. Having said that, what board would you suggest? Thanks again.
Might I suggest one of Asus' TUF boards. They are built to last, and are awesome to boot. I have a Sabertooth Z77 right now, and I will never buy a different motherboard again. Worth the money over the Z77 AsRock Extreme4 I had, and well above the Asus P8P68 LE I had before (I think that was the name, I still have that board as a backup, but man am I impressed with the Sabertooth.) The thing is, I'm sure the Hero is just as awesome as the Sabertooth. You don't need a 4790K either, you can get the 4690K for like 100$ cheaper and the hyperthreding isn't that big of a deal now that we have multiprocessor CPUs. For the money right now, I'd spend the little more, get the 2011-V3 CPU and Board, you'll need DDR4 which is still expensive, but you can get the board and the CPU with only a modest upgrade in cash out, but it will up you to a proper 6 core processor, which will in the future be a big help. We're on the cusp of four cores right now where games are starting to crop up that can use more than 4 cores and or hyperthreading. Look into the new stuff, and intel extreme chips. I can't recommend the highest end ones, but there are three different ones available, and either of the bottom two are champs. The lowest tier has 28 lanes native PCI express 3.0, and the two higher ones have 40 lanes available. The higher tiered motherboards can make use of PCI express M2 slots, which means you can get a SSD for them that's quite a bit faster than a SATA SSD. That's the latest greatest though and there is a premium right now, but it's where the hobby is heading, so it will be more future proof. The downside is that Intel rarely reuses a chipset, so once you buy the board, chances are you'll only be able to get those three chips for it. When you upgrade, it'll be time to upgrade everything.
http://pcpartpicker.com/p/psvQ99
Something like that.