Comparing 2666mhz and 3200mhz RAM with an i3 10105f and a 1060 3GB memory stick.
Comparing 2666mhz and 3200mhz RAM with an i3 10105f and a 1060 3GB memory stick.
You're planning a budget gaming setup with 3200mhz RAM and an H510 motherboard that only handles 2666mhz on 10th gen CPUs. The performance gap between these speeds might be noticeable in games, especially if you're targeting higher frame rates or demanding titles. Your 16GB of RAM is solid for gaming, but the RAM speed difference could affect stability and responsiveness.
There will be some variation, though it won’t be huge. Still, I’d advise against using an H510 motherboard because it misses out on many important features.
You can handle 3200 operations or more even with the h510. If not, you can always adjust the RAM to a higher quality model than what the cheap memory offers. (I'm using 3200 on an older 7th generation chip, which limits it to 2400, so I've optimized it down to CL11 and other very low-end options.)
Ajustando para un mejor rendimiento? Soy nuevo en la construcción de computadoras.
Timing could be improved even with slower speeds... but getting RAM timing accurate is tough, and it usually isn’t worth the hassle or frustration for most people.
RAM features three levels of specifications: 1) clock speed / data rate (MHz/MT/s), such as 2666 or 3200, indicating how fast data moves in and out—higher is usually preferable. 2) secondary timings like 16-18-18-19, often called CAS latency, which affects stability and performance; lower values are better. 3) tertiary options that fine-tune various aspects of the system, with many choices available depending on the board. On my 7th generation board, I used 16GB (2x8GB) RAM at 3200 MHz. The maximum is 2400 MHz, so I set it to 2400 with 11-13-13-14 timings, which improved benchmark results noticeably.
The H510 doesn’t allow RAM overclocking. Use a Z490/B560/H570/Z590 board for that. Your CPU can reach up to 2666mhz without overclocking, so you won’t notice much change. With 3200mhz you might achieve lower timings like CL12 or CL13, which could still improve performance slightly but not significantly. I own a 3200mhz CL16, but because of my CPU and motherboard limits, I’m capped at 2666mhz as well.