F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Do i need 16gb of ram?

Do i need 16gb of ram?

Do i need 16gb of ram?

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CaleD31
Junior Member
11
02-01-2016, 03:20 AM
#1
Your setup is solid for gaming with the GTX 1050 and decent RAM. If you want smoother performance and better multitasking, upgrading to 16GB RAM could help.
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CaleD31
02-01-2016, 03:20 AM #1

Your setup is solid for gaming with the GTX 1050 and decent RAM. If you want smoother performance and better multitasking, upgrading to 16GB RAM could help.

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CheezBurgerzz
Member
202
02-07-2016, 09:12 PM
#2
No, I don’t run out of RAM. It’s a resource available during operation.
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CheezBurgerzz
02-07-2016, 09:12 PM #2

No, I don’t run out of RAM. It’s a resource available during operation.

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ninty99
Member
107
02-10-2016, 04:33 AM
#3
Solid works suggests 16GB, while Inventor advises 20GB. Although both mention 8GB as the lowest requirement, I believe upgrading would enhance your performance if you have the budget.
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ninty99
02-10-2016, 04:33 AM #3

Solid works suggests 16GB, while Inventor advises 20GB. Although both mention 8GB as the lowest requirement, I believe upgrading would enhance your performance if you have the budget.

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_Zeyko_
Junior Member
14
02-10-2016, 08:56 AM
#4
You're facing a situation where your GPU has limited VRAM, causing the game to consume more RAM than available. If no extra memory is free, it will rely on the SSD to temporarily store data, which can slow down performance. Running on 8GB should be sufficient if you're just playing the game alone. Increasing to another 8GB would help in the long term and is affordable right now, so it won't strain your budget.
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_Zeyko_
02-10-2016, 08:56 AM #4

You're facing a situation where your GPU has limited VRAM, causing the game to consume more RAM than available. If no extra memory is free, it will rely on the SSD to temporarily store data, which can slow down performance. Running on 8GB should be sufficient if you're just playing the game alone. Increasing to another 8GB would help in the long term and is affordable right now, so it won't strain your budget.

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superkenji123
Junior Member
38
02-10-2016, 10:38 AM
#5
I upgraded to 16GB initially when low memory warnings appeared after gaming. This coincided with swapping my GTX 980 for a 980 Ti. I believe the additional VRAM on the 980 Ti required more RAM in certain open-world titles. The two games that triggered the warnings were Witcher 3 and Fallout 4.
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superkenji123
02-10-2016, 10:38 AM #5

I upgraded to 16GB initially when low memory warnings appeared after gaming. This coincided with swapping my GTX 980 for a 980 Ti. I believe the additional VRAM on the 980 Ti required more RAM in certain open-world titles. The two games that triggered the warnings were Witcher 3 and Fallout 4.

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derFrisson
Junior Member
40
02-14-2016, 12:27 PM
#6
Yes, because why not especially if you can afford it. I ran at 8GB just for poops and giggles and my PC ran like severe GARBAGE on an unusable barge in a river with no water during a drought and Californian Wildfire.
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derFrisson
02-14-2016, 12:27 PM #6

Yes, because why not especially if you can afford it. I ran at 8GB just for poops and giggles and my PC ran like severe GARBAGE on an unusable barge in a river with no water during a drought and Californian Wildfire.

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PrincessOwley
Member
52
02-19-2016, 09:06 PM
#7
Track how your system and GPU memory behave during regular tasks and under heavy loads. Observe performance when handling large projects or demanding applications. I assembled a basic office PC with 8GB RAM, only using Chrome and one app—always smooth. My older laptop was upgraded to 8GB after running low on memory. An HTPC with 8GB works well for streaming and light editing. A more powerful machine with 16GB handles gaming and video editing better, even if it’s not at full capacity. Smooth operation depended on using RAM instead of disk cache, especially when CPU performance was limited. The concern is whether your motherboard has available slots or all are full. Adding another DIMM could be cheaper than buying a new RAM kit, but matching current specs matters—especially if mixing RAM types causes stability issues. The 1050 3GB might limit performance, and the GTX 960’s 4GB VRAM is tight now. Upgrading to 8GB or more could boost speed, and a stronger card may improve GPU acceleration for demanding work.
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PrincessOwley
02-19-2016, 09:06 PM #7

Track how your system and GPU memory behave during regular tasks and under heavy loads. Observe performance when handling large projects or demanding applications. I assembled a basic office PC with 8GB RAM, only using Chrome and one app—always smooth. My older laptop was upgraded to 8GB after running low on memory. An HTPC with 8GB works well for streaming and light editing. A more powerful machine with 16GB handles gaming and video editing better, even if it’s not at full capacity. Smooth operation depended on using RAM instead of disk cache, especially when CPU performance was limited. The concern is whether your motherboard has available slots or all are full. Adding another DIMM could be cheaper than buying a new RAM kit, but matching current specs matters—especially if mixing RAM types causes stability issues. The 1050 3GB might limit performance, and the GTX 960’s 4GB VRAM is tight now. Upgrading to 8GB or more could boost speed, and a stronger card may improve GPU acceleration for demanding work.

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sargeantdwarf
Junior Member
27
02-24-2016, 11:29 PM
#8
8GB of system memory is just enough to handle daily operations and Windows 10. For gaming, 16GB works well.
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sargeantdwarf
02-24-2016, 11:29 PM #8

8GB of system memory is just enough to handle daily operations and Windows 10. For gaming, 16GB works well.

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happyme4293
Junior Member
15
02-28-2016, 04:35 AM
#9
Thanks!
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happyme4293
02-28-2016, 04:35 AM #9

Thanks!