Hello there Spencer, I'll see if I can be of any help for you.
For doing production work like this, I'd still recommend something decent performance just so you can continue to experience good responsiveness and reliability over years of usage and any possible upgrades you might be doing in the next few years. In general, software requires more and more horsepower to run as a new generation is released, so don't plan for the performance you only need right now, but the performance you may need to have three years down the line, if you really want your investment to last.
Most of the computer systems I do for design purposes are custom-built systems. However, a lot of the business computers we've been selling lately have been HP Business Desktop series or even the Z series workstations. In the past I really was not a fan of pre-built systems, their quality seemed sub par and cost much more than going with a custom system. However, I've been thoroughly impressed with these computers.
First, let me start by saying, unless you have someone you really know and trust to manage your computer systems, I would be cautious before going into a custom-built computer. The reason for this is because service and support for this computer falls on the person you buy it from, and if they aren't reliable to get you going, then it falls on you personally. Also, one custom computer is not equal to another, and while they might state something like "500 GB hard drive" for specifications, there's a whole lot of difference between a Western Digital Black 500 GB 7,200 RPM SATAIII hard drive with 5 year warranty and leading performance, compared to a Seagate 500 GB low power hard drive with 1 year warranty and horrible performance for production environments.
That being said, for a production computer in the price rang you are talking about, here is what I would recommend for a custom computer:
- Intel Core i3-3220 3.3 Ghz dual-core LGA1155 processor
- Cooler Master Hyper 212 Evo LGA1155 120mm CPU cooler
- Arctic Silver 5 thermal compound
- ASUS P8Z77-M MicroATX LGA1155 motherboard
- Corsair Vengeance 8 GB (2 X 4 GB) DDR3 1600 memory
- Western Digital Black 500 GB 7,200 RPM SATAIII 64MB Cache hard drive
- Corsair Enthusiast TX650 V2 ATX12V Bronze power supply
- Corsair Carbide 200R ATX Mid-Tower chassis
- Lite-On DVD-Burner SATA Black optical drive
- Windows 7 Professional 64-bit OEM
All totaled on Newegg this runs about $740 without shipping. If you have a little more to budget in, I'd recommend upgrading from the Core i3 to a Core i5-3450 3.1 Ghz quad-core processor for an additional $70, and if you really want the best responsiveness, then replace the WD 500 GB hard drive with a Samsung 840 Pro 256 GB SSD for an additional $150. Remember that if you have someone else build this for you, you're probably going to have some additional expense for markup and assembly/installation time.
Now, if you are not comfortable going with a custom-built system, then I'd recommend either an HP Business Desktop Pro 6300 or ideally, an HP Z-220 Workstation.
HP Business Desktop Pro 6300 Mini-tower:
- Intel Core i3-3220 3.3 Ghz dual-core processor
- Q77 Chipset motherboard support up to 32 GB RAM
- HP 4 GB DDR3 1333 memory
- 500 GB 7,200 RPM SATAIII hard drive
- HP 320 Watt Active PFC compatible UPS
- HP DVD-Burner SATA
- Windows 8 Professional 64-bit (downgraded to Windows 7 Professional 64-bit)
Total cost without shipping: $600
I'd upgrade that unit to 8 GB of RAM (costs less than $50 additional) and you have a pretty solid system with an HP business 3-year warranty to back it up. They have great business support, much better than Dell I have learned.
HP Z-Series Workstation convertible min-tower:
- Intel Core i3-3220 3.3 Ghz dual-core processor
- C216 Workstation class chipset motherboard supporting RAID 0/1, 32 GB RAM, and ECC support.
- HP 4 GB (2 X 2 GB) DDR3 1600 memory
- 500 GB 7,200 RPM SATAIII hard drive
- HP 400 Watt Active PFC Compatible UPS
- HP DVD-Burner SATA
- Windows 7 Professional 64-bit
Total cost without shipping: $675
Again, I'd recommend upgrading that system to 8 GB of RAM, and with those systems you can also chose to do an SSD upgrade. The HP Z-series workstations are quite the powerhouse it seems, I've installed half a dozen in the last three months and they all have been flawless.
If you have any questions and need some more information, please feel free to let me know. I understand I've kinda bombarded you with information here!