F5F Stay Refreshed Software PC Gaming Resolved: Reduced graphics card utilization and frequency reduction – could memory be the limiting factor?

Resolved: Reduced graphics card utilization and frequency reduction – could memory be the limiting factor?

Resolved: Reduced graphics card utilization and frequency reduction – could memory be the limiting factor?

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huskey000
Member
121
11-20-2019, 07:03 PM
#1
My hardware configuration is as follows:

Processor: Ryzen 5 2600 with standard cooling.
Motherboard: MSI B450M Mortar.
Graphics Card: Zotac RTX 2060.
Memory: An unspecified 8GB DDR4 kit running at 2400MHz, single-channel.

In numerous games – including Fortnite, Battlefield V, and Grand Theft Auto V – my graphics card rarely reaches its maximum boost clock speed and generally stays below 70% GPU utilization. I’ve been informed that Ryzen systems benefit significantly from quicker, dual-channel memory, and I'm curious if this is the source of these performance limitations.

I’m currently using temporary RAM borrowed from a friend while I save for an upgrade. I want to avoid upgrading my memory only to continue experiencing these problems, and I would appreciate verification on this matter.
H
huskey000
11-20-2019, 07:03 PM #1

My hardware configuration is as follows:

Processor: Ryzen 5 2600 with standard cooling.
Motherboard: MSI B450M Mortar.
Graphics Card: Zotac RTX 2060.
Memory: An unspecified 8GB DDR4 kit running at 2400MHz, single-channel.

In numerous games – including Fortnite, Battlefield V, and Grand Theft Auto V – my graphics card rarely reaches its maximum boost clock speed and generally stays below 70% GPU utilization. I’ve been informed that Ryzen systems benefit significantly from quicker, dual-channel memory, and I'm curious if this is the source of these performance limitations.

I’m currently using temporary RAM borrowed from a friend while I save for an upgrade. I want to avoid upgrading my memory only to continue experiencing these problems, and I would appreciate verification on this matter.

L
Linda
Member
149
11-21-2019, 12:31 AM
#2
Battlefield V consumes more processor resources. An i7 8700k operating at 5 GHz demonstrates a 15-20% increased CPU load compared to my RTX 2080 Ti. The graphics card typically maintains approximately 45-55% utilization with ultra and high settings, achieving a frame rate of 144 fps.
L
Linda
11-21-2019, 12:31 AM #2

Battlefield V consumes more processor resources. An i7 8700k operating at 5 GHz demonstrates a 15-20% increased CPU load compared to my RTX 2080 Ti. The graphics card typically maintains approximately 45-55% utilization with ultra and high settings, achieving a frame rate of 144 fps.

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pandagirl5956
Junior Member
16
11-22-2019, 08:06 PM
#3
Purchase a 2x8GB memory kit for optimal dual-channel performance.
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pandagirl5956
11-22-2019, 08:06 PM #3

Purchase a 2x8GB memory kit for optimal dual-channel performance.

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Terko
Junior Member
40
11-22-2019, 08:44 PM
#4
I intend to proceed with this, but I was simply inquiring whether the random access memory was definitively the root cause of the problem, or if another factor might be responsible.
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Terko
11-22-2019, 08:44 PM #4

I intend to proceed with this, but I was simply inquiring whether the random access memory was definitively the root cause of the problem, or if another factor might be responsible.

K
KateKitKat
Member
138
11-23-2019, 03:26 AM
#5
Battlefield V consumes more processor resources. An Intel Core i7-8700K clocked at 5GHz experiences a 15-20% increase in CPU load compared to my GeForce RTX 2080 Ti. The graphics card typically operates at approximately 45-55% utilization with maximum and high settings, achieving an average frame rate of 144.
K
KateKitKat
11-23-2019, 03:26 AM #5

Battlefield V consumes more processor resources. An Intel Core i7-8700K clocked at 5GHz experiences a 15-20% increase in CPU load compared to my GeForce RTX 2080 Ti. The graphics card typically operates at approximately 45-55% utilization with maximum and high settings, achieving an average frame rate of 144.