Is this good enough for recording Minecraft? (URGENT)?

I'm looking to make some Minecraft videos for youtube, and I want it to run really well. Besides from when I'm and not recording, I want Minecraft to run at a designed maybe 60 FPS? I'm fine with 30 when recording but yeah…

Acer AXC-105 Desktop Tower
Desktop Tower with AMD E1-2500 Dual-core 1.40GHz CPU, 4GB RAM, 1TB HDD, DVD, AMD Radeon HD 7300 Series Graphics, 1 x HDMI, 6 x USB, Windows 8.1

Is this good enough?
Two things to note, THANKFULLY this does have a HDMI input, and I own an Elgato Game Capture so I can record the computer easily, and secondly which will probably be the route I will take but depending on the FPS I get, Fraps.

Please help, really looking to buy this computer, it looks great just I need some input since I'm not the best at this kind of stuff.

I use fraps to record, I don't notice any difference in fps when recording. But if you don't want to use fraps, try Action. That one doesn't decrease fps very much.

1.40GHz is a very low speed and it has integrated graphics, there's no way to tell for sure but you may not even get 30 FPS while not recording. Give it a try if you can return it and buy the demo, you can also try game debate but the processor and graphics card doesn't show.

Your processor is making it literally impossible for you to have quality at all while recording let alone diminishing your chance to record at all. Your video card does the work of processing the video but storing it while recording and playing a game on a processor that poor isn't a good idea unless you like lower than 10 fps.

Sorry, but with that processor it's a no-no. Neither is that Graphics Card. You would have to invest more into the computer if you wish to start recording videos.

You should consider getting a GeForce GTX 650 or Higher Graphics Card. It has build in capture software(GeForce ShadowPlay) that puts significantly less pressure on your hardware than Fraps. You'll kill 2 birds with 1 stone by buying one. You'll have a gaming graphics card, and you'll have a capture software to record games without putting system through too much pressure.