F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop 4GB RAM, four 8GB storage units, two dual-channel configurations

4GB RAM, four 8GB storage units, two dual-channel configurations

4GB RAM, four 8GB storage units, two dual-channel configurations

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Justingunz96
Junior Member
44
06-10-2016, 08:26 AM
#1
Running two separate 2x8GB Dual-Channel kits side by side is feasible and can work well if your system needs more memory than one channel provides. It’s a common setup for balancing performance and cost. A 4x8GB Quad-Channel option offers higher capacity but comes with a steeper price tag and more complexity. Decide based on your workload demands versus budget.
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Justingunz96
06-10-2016, 08:26 AM #1

Running two separate 2x8GB Dual-Channel kits side by side is feasible and can work well if your system needs more memory than one channel provides. It’s a common setup for balancing performance and cost. A 4x8GB Quad-Channel option offers higher capacity but comes with a steeper price tag and more complexity. Decide based on your workload demands versus budget.

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tamemarco
Senior Member
482
06-10-2016, 10:57 AM
#2
What processor are you using? Most common CPUs use dual-channel memory, so you won’t get the full benefit of quad-channel unless you’re on a high-end build.
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tamemarco
06-10-2016, 10:57 AM #2

What processor are you using? Most common CPUs use dual-channel memory, so you won’t get the full benefit of quad-channel unless you’re on a high-end build.

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Heyzer
Member
208
06-13-2016, 05:46 AM
#3
They're identical. As long as the speed and timing match, you can combine them without issues. Using four channels works too.
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Heyzer
06-13-2016, 05:46 AM #3

They're identical. As long as the speed and timing match, you can combine them without issues. Using four channels works too.

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Ender_Craft47
Posting Freak
866
06-13-2016, 07:21 AM
#4
It's the identical investment. Initially, with a dual-channel motherboard and CPU, upgrade only if you truly require additional RAM. It won't boost your FPS. Now, if you genuinely need more RAM for an application like Adobe video editing, then proceed. If the DIMMS match the same specifications, the motherboard doesn't matter—unless it's a dual-channel model (like x399, x299, etc.), in which case dual-channel performance is unaffected.
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Ender_Craft47
06-13-2016, 07:21 AM #4

It's the identical investment. Initially, with a dual-channel motherboard and CPU, upgrade only if you truly require additional RAM. It won't boost your FPS. Now, if you genuinely need more RAM for an application like Adobe video editing, then proceed. If the DIMMS match the same specifications, the motherboard doesn't matter—unless it's a dual-channel model (like x399, x299, etc.), in which case dual-channel performance is unaffected.

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Bazzathebear
Junior Member
20
06-13-2016, 07:39 AM
#5
It seems you're considering upgrading to a new RAM module. The i5-6600K works well with DDR4-3000, but whether it's worth the change depends on your needs and budget.
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Bazzathebear
06-13-2016, 07:39 AM #5

It seems you're considering upgrading to a new RAM module. The i5-6600K works well with DDR4-3000, but whether it's worth the change depends on your needs and budget.

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AirForceOne
Junior Member
34
06-20-2016, 04:44 AM
#6
Ensure your existing 16GB provides adequate capacity. The additional performance gains from quad-channel dimming won’t matter if your current storage is insufficient.
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AirForceOne
06-20-2016, 04:44 AM #6

Ensure your existing 16GB provides adequate capacity. The additional performance gains from quad-channel dimming won’t matter if your current storage is insufficient.

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Machi_Gamz
Member
204
06-20-2016, 05:46 AM
#7
As long as the specifications remain identical, the brand difference doesn't matter.
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Machi_Gamz
06-20-2016, 05:46 AM #7

As long as the specifications remain identical, the brand difference doesn't matter.