I didn't want to do it, but he made me... :p
Motherboard: IntelĀ® Desktop Board DZ68BCI like stable. This board is stable. I haven't even installed the intel desktop software to look at overclocking. Probably won't bother.
Edit2: I can't believe I forgot the processor!
Processor: Intel 3.5GHz Core I7-2700kRAM: 16G Kingston HyperX PNP DDR3No serious regrets here, but I wish I had paid more attention to the motherboard being optimized for lower voltages. Anyway, it's in, it's working fine.
Video: Two
nVidia GTX-560ti 448 Cores FTW in SLI
System Drive: Two 180G Corsair SSD's in Raid 0 using Intel's Performance Management System
Additional Drives: 20G SSD (originally intended to be used for SmartResponse) and an additional 64G SSD that I installed because I had it....
Power Supply: Seasonic 1000w PlatinumThis is probablly overkill, but with two GTX 560's I didn't want to chance it. There are a lot of reviews complaining about coil whine or capacitor whine, but I haven't heard any of that. My biggest problem was the fact that it's an inch deeper than most of the power supplies I've used, and wouldn't fit in the case I had planned for it (an old Lian Li).
Needless to say, this thing is stupid fast. The Windows Experience test maxed out all 5 sub scores at 7.9 (for whatever that is worth). Most importantly, it seems stable. Even though the memory voltage wasn't ideal for this motherboard, it seems to be handling it just fine.
If I enable fast boot in the bios (disable all of the graphics/text displays and interrupt prompts during boot), goes from the power button to the desktop in about 12 seconds. Shutdown is equally fast.
It went together fast and easy. I had some trouble getting the SSD's mounted properly, but that was because I was using an old case with proprietary 3.5" shock mounts, and I couldn't find all of the hardware. I McGyvered something together for now, but I think I'm going to have to invest in another case. After connecting up the hardware, I booted into the bios, enabled RAID, then booted into the RAID firmware and configured the Raid 0 volume. Installed Windows 7, and the drivers for the Intel stuff (used the disk that came in the box), and installed the nVidia drivers and enabled SLI.... pretty simple and painless. Probably an hour total if you don't count the Windows Update crap (that took 45 minutes, and that was after installing from a disk with SP1 streamed
)
I'm looking for case suggestions that this mammoth Seasonic will fit in. I'm trying to stay in the mid-tower size range to keep the footprint low. I don't need 73 drive bays. The biggest challenge seems to be getting the power supply to fit (it's pretty huge) and the graphics cards not butting up against the back of the drive bays. I had a P180B a while back, but it's too freakin big, I don't care for the door on the front, and don't like the front panel connectors being low on the front face (prefer on top front edge, or at the top on the front). I'd also prefer one that has a USB 3.0 front panel connector, although I may accomplish that via the aftermarket....
Suggestions?
Edit: Kudos to Khross for the hardware suggestions. I'm getting lazy in my old age, and if I hadn't been able to get a good set of suggestions I probably wouldn't have bothered doing this.