Can I ask you to help me in building or even buying such a PC with a
spectacular spec that would fulfil the above criteria.
I wouldn't say that you need a particularly impressive PC; about the
only thing that matters is the quality of the sound card, and you should
aim for something impressive there. I researched this area because the
soundcard in my (Lenovo ThinkCentre M52) PC caused earth-loop hum when
connected to my QUAD 33 pre-amp. Almost any PC with current specs will
do the job.
I keep my CD collection (about 500 at the moment) on an external 400Gb
USB2 drive. I notice the performance penalty of even the USB2, so put
your monster inside your new PC.
In calculating the space needed, it's worthwhile allocating ~200Mb per
CD for the MP3 files, and also about 700Mb to keep an image copy of the
CD itself. This way you can re-create your original CD when (as is
inevitable) it fails. There are bacteria specialising in eating CDs...
Armed with the image copies (I use Nero for those) you can "Mount" the
image on a virtual CD drive (Using Alcohol 52%) and then play your
original CD-quality music. I always rip my MP3's from the CD image, as
this is a good way to check that the image is a "good" one - my CD drive
is failing, and sometimes introduces glitches.
A fast CPU is helpful when ripping to high-quality MP3. I use CDEX and
it drives my 3GHz Pentium 4 to 100%, so is the limiting factor in
ripping a CD (Takes about 10 minutes)
I don't use my PC for Hi-Fi listening, but if you plan on previewing the
music, and don't have any need for more than 2 speakers I can highly
recommend the Creative Gigaworks T20 speakers - I'm revelling in the
sound from mine as I type (Pat Metheny - American Garage). They are
spectacularly good, given their diminutive (in Hi-Fi terms) size.
If there's anything specific you need to know, just ask!
--
Steve Swift
http://www.swiftys.org.uk/swifty.html
http://www.ringers.org.uk