For a while now, the golden standard for gaming has been 16GB of RAM. Even the higher clock speeds are relatively inexpensive—a 16GB kit of 3600MHz is on sale for about ~ $75 at the time of writing—and if you’re willing to sift through the aftermarket, cheap second hand RAM kits are fairly common. A 16GB kit will run pretty much every
Jun 6, 2021. #2. You can be guaranteed that if dual channel is used, then this will fail. If you can live with going single channel, then it might work if the timings are reasonably close. You'd have to try to really know, but there would definitely be a performance hit. I wouldn't recommend it even if the third stick is a matching model/timing.
1,134. 15. 19,965. Sep 18, 2015. Solution. #3. 16GB Single stick RAMs are not existing in the current market. Since it says dual channel, adding another 8GB DDR3 1600 G.Skill RipJaws X will enable the dual channel facility and it'll increase the performance a bit. Then if it's not fast enough and if you are using more than such RAM capacity
We strongly recommend that you do NOT combine multiple kits of CORSAIR memory in your system. This is because our memory kits are only validated for their rated performance when only using the modules included in that specific kit. If you combine multiple kits, even if they are rated with the same speed, you risk causing compatibility issues
Below memory compatibility will be DDR3 unless stated otherwise. (example: DDR3L) DDR3 is not backward-compatible with DDR2. DDR3 and DDR3L are socket compatible, however, It is NOT compatible with computers using 4th Generation Intel (Haswell) processors, which exclusively support 1.35 V operation for memory. Example:
What is a 1rx8 ram stick… what is a 2rx8 ram stick.. these are not normal terms used to describe computer memory. Usually when describing RAM for compatibility reasons, they are described by Size, Speed, and Type. So, in my computer, I would say, I have 2 sticks of 16gb 3200Mhz RAM no clue what you’re description about the RAM you have means.
For example: Let's say you have a 4GB stick and a 1GB one, and that you want Dual-Channel. With Intel Memory Flex, you would then have 1GB + 1GB of RAM in dual channel mode from each sticks, while the remaining 3GB from the 4GB stick would still be in single-channel mode.
You would be mixing single rank and dual rank ram which in general is a bad idea. More than likely this will force all your RAM to run at 2133mhz. If you really need more RAM get another identical kit of the 2x8GB RAM and use that. However the first gen Ryzen CPU memory controllers like the 1700 do not play well with 4x RAM sticks and you would
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can you mix 8gb ram with 16gb ram