F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Ram bus vs number of ram

Ram bus vs number of ram

Ram bus vs number of ram

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sirbreno
Member
191
03-19-2016, 06:25 PM
#1
I understand this might seem outdated or confusing. I’m curious about the key differences between those configurations. Compared to the 2*32Gb setup, the 4*16Gb version offers more bandwidth, while the 8*8Gb option provides even greater capacity. Regarding power usage, more RAM modules generally consume more energy. As for performance, it depends on whether the modules share the same bus or if each operates independently.
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sirbreno
03-19-2016, 06:25 PM #1

I understand this might seem outdated or confusing. I’m curious about the key differences between those configurations. Compared to the 2*32Gb setup, the 4*16Gb version offers more bandwidth, while the 8*8Gb option provides even greater capacity. Regarding power usage, more RAM modules generally consume more energy. As for performance, it depends on whether the modules share the same bus or if each operates independently.

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Ash_Crafter
Junior Member
4
03-19-2016, 07:43 PM
#2
Maintaining identical channel counts ensures consistent performance.
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Ash_Crafter
03-19-2016, 07:43 PM #2

Maintaining identical channel counts ensures consistent performance.

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donutz445
Junior Member
13
03-24-2016, 02:59 PM
#3
It varies by CPU type. Most consumer systems use dual-channel memory only, so configurations like 4x16, 2x32 or 8x8 don’t really matter. But on enthusiast platforms (like LGA20XX, TR4), quad-channel support is common, which might make a 4x16 better than 2x32 and 8x8GB won’t change the outcome.
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donutz445
03-24-2016, 02:59 PM #3

It varies by CPU type. Most consumer systems use dual-channel memory only, so configurations like 4x16, 2x32 or 8x8 don’t really matter. But on enthusiast platforms (like LGA20XX, TR4), quad-channel support is common, which might make a 4x16 better than 2x32 and 8x8GB won’t change the outcome.

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ReborntoKill
Posting Freak
821
03-24-2016, 11:00 PM
#4
This setup performs better than the single-rank version under identical conditions.
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ReborntoKill
03-24-2016, 11:00 PM #4

This setup performs better than the single-rank version under identical conditions.

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DurpVolts
Member
173
03-25-2016, 12:24 AM
#5
You have a 2*16GB RAM setup with 2666MHz clocks, and you're planning to add another 2*16GB RAM at the same speed. This gives you a total of 4*16GB of memory. Compared to a 2x32GB system at 3000MHz, the upgrade will significantly boost memory capacity and performance.
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DurpVolts
03-25-2016, 12:24 AM #5

You have a 2*16GB RAM setup with 2666MHz clocks, and you're planning to add another 2*16GB RAM at the same speed. This gives you a total of 4*16GB of memory. Compared to a 2x32GB system at 3000MHz, the upgrade will significantly boost memory capacity and performance.