Starise
So any good builder in the UK worth his or her salt is capable to do it if you don't want to do it yourself.JMHO
Anyone can bolt parts together.
The devil is in *all* the details.
Building a great DAW is similar to a mechanic building a great race car.
Fast yes... you don't want a "Sprint Car" to run an endurance race.
A local custom computer shop has no idea about the specifics of building a DAW.
I know... I bought my first PC from the local custom computer shop.
They couldn't even install my two Turtle Beach Tahiti cards.
I had to figure it out... and (ironically) that launched my career.
Simply choosing "gaming components" is not going to produce the best possible DAW configuration.
Certain parameters in the BIOS result in low/consistent DPC latency.
Some motherboards expose those parameters... others don't.
If you don't have access to them... there's no tweaking them.
Gaming is all about high frame-rates (for video performance).
As DAW users, we're not pushing video hard... this is not a priority for our work.
That high video performance may come at the expense of high DPC Latency.
To achieve high gaming benchmarks, some drivers may monopolize CPU time (high DPC Latency).
Building DAWs is no different than any other trade/craft.
- Anyone can construct a patio deck
- Anyone can work on a car
- Anyone can lay carpeting
- Anyone can paint a house
- Anyone can landscape their yard
Anyone can do the above (there's no voodoo involved)... but the person who does it all day/every day is a professional.
There's a level of experience/knowledge that a novice doesn't have.
Anyone can bolt together a computer.
A professional builds a top-performing DAW from top to bottom (no guessing, no gamble).
The tech assembling machines at "Crazy Kenny's Custom Computer Warehouse" is not that professional.