F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Can you tell me if those parts will work together?

Can you tell me if those parts will work together?

Can you tell me if those parts will work together?

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Chinesename
Junior Member
2
05-08-2026, 08:37 PM
#1
I need help figuring out if my new parts match what I already bought. I used a GT 710 before, now I want to swap it for an RX 7600 XT. Will I still need the same power supply? Also, I have this Dell monitor, S2421H. Thanks so much! Just by the way, my math said I needed about 369 watts of power.
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Chinesename
05-08-2026, 08:37 PM #1

I need help figuring out if my new parts match what I already bought. I used a GT 710 before, now I want to swap it for an RX 7600 XT. Will I still need the same power supply? Also, I have this Dell monitor, S2421H. Thanks so much! Just by the way, my math said I needed about 369 watts of power.

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Riphtix
Junior Member
6
05-09-2026, 02:03 AM
#2
They work together well, but you need to get two sticks of RAM at a time. It is better to buy two 8GB sticks or even two 16GB sticks so you have 32GB total. You should always buy memory in pairs because then you won't run slow on the single channel mode and will only lose up to 25% of your speed. I also wonder if you want a big hard drive, maybe a 1TB SSD instead of one that is too big for what it needs. Here are some parts for a computer with an Intel Core i5-10400F chip ($119.99), a Gigabyte H410M board ($84.17), and 32GB of RAM (two sticks of 16GB) from Silicon Power ($43.97). You can also get a big hard drive called Silicon Power UD90 for $97.97, and a video card called Gigabyte GAMING OC Radeon RX 7600 XT for $15.00, and a power supply called Cooler Master MWE Bronze V2 for $43.97. All together it comes out to $361.10. Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when they are available. This list was made by PCPartPicker on April 14, 2025.
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Riphtix
05-09-2026, 02:03 AM #2

They work together well, but you need to get two sticks of RAM at a time. It is better to buy two 8GB sticks or even two 16GB sticks so you have 32GB total. You should always buy memory in pairs because then you won't run slow on the single channel mode and will only lose up to 25% of your speed. I also wonder if you want a big hard drive, maybe a 1TB SSD instead of one that is too big for what it needs. Here are some parts for a computer with an Intel Core i5-10400F chip ($119.99), a Gigabyte H410M board ($84.17), and 32GB of RAM (two sticks of 16GB) from Silicon Power ($43.97). You can also get a big hard drive called Silicon Power UD90 for $97.97, and a video card called Gigabyte GAMING OC Radeon RX 7600 XT for $15.00, and a power supply called Cooler Master MWE Bronze V2 for $43.97. All together it comes out to $361.10. Prices include shipping, taxes, and discounts when they are available. This list was made by PCPartPicker on April 14, 2025.

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wizebana
Member
141
05-12-2026, 06:54 PM
#3
thank you for the advice dude
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wizebana
05-12-2026, 06:54 PM #3

thank you for the advice dude

C
136
05-13-2026, 04:52 AM
#4
Actually, you probably don't need to change a BIOS at all. You just have no idea what that stuff is for right now.
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cluelessboy456
05-13-2026, 04:52 AM #4

Actually, you probably don't need to change a BIOS at all. You just have no idea what that stuff is for right now.

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ZERTOX_YT
Member
62
05-21-2026, 11:04 PM
#5
I wanted to know if my PC parts work together. The calculator said I need about 370 watts of power. My current supply is an 80 Plus Bronze 450 watt unit. Since I am upgrading from a GT 710 to an RX 7600 XT, do I have to change the PSU? Are all my parts compatible? Thanks so much! https://pcpartpicker.com/list/tZ2W6Q
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ZERTOX_YT
05-21-2026, 11:04 PM #5

I wanted to know if my PC parts work together. The calculator said I need about 370 watts of power. My current supply is an 80 Plus Bronze 450 watt unit. Since I am upgrading from a GT 710 to an RX 7600 XT, do I have to change the PSU? Are all my parts compatible? Thanks so much! https://pcpartpicker.com/list/tZ2W6Q

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163
05-28-2026, 03:26 AM
#6
How old is your power supply unit? Even if it was brand new, I'd get a 550W or 650W power supply and go with the RX 7600XT GPU and call it good. Here are the specs for that card: https://www.techpowerup.com/gpu-specs/gi...-oc.b11482 One other thing about your build, if you get a dual channel RAM kit with low latency at 2666MHz on DDR4, you can actually boost your gaming performance. You won't get anything out of 3000MHz because the motherboard chipset has limits there. I moved this post from Components to Systems and merged other posts so please don't send me more threads if you want clear answers instead of a mess.
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badgergirl0315
05-28-2026, 03:26 AM #6

How old is your power supply unit? Even if it was brand new, I'd get a 550W or 650W power supply and go with the RX 7600XT GPU and call it good. Here are the specs for that card: https://www.techpowerup.com/gpu-specs/gi...-oc.b11482 One other thing about your build, if you get a dual channel RAM kit with low latency at 2666MHz on DDR4, you can actually boost your gaming performance. You won't get anything out of 3000MHz because the motherboard chipset has limits there. I moved this post from Components to Systems and merged other posts so please don't send me more threads if you want clear answers instead of a mess.