About the computer host graphics card and memory upgrade issues.

Updated on number 2024-04-17
13 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    There is no need to rise, and it will not have much effect if it rises again.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    The fan can be added to the graphics card, and it is time to change it, and if the video memory is not enough, there is also a direct replacement of the motherboard, and the memory is downclocked. You have a 533, you want to plug in the 800, it's still 533, it's better to change the motherboard directly, and a G31 is stronger than your set.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    385 blocks to get 512M memory That should have been bought around 06, right? It really shouldn't be upgraded!! My friend bought a computer similar to yours at that time Some time ago, I felt that I was slow to change a graphics card.

    The CPU couldn't keep up or was slow, and after a few months there was a problem with the memory again. I bought a new memory.,After a few months, there was a problem with the motherboard.。。 What a tragedy!!

    Just changed a few major parts.

    The accessories are aging. It's just easy to go wrong!! Use it first, and then change it to a new one when you have money. I dispose of the old one. It should be worth a few hundred, and now a new one is not expensive, and about 1700 can be equipped with a brand new and good computer.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    This configuration ......Sweat! Please also high-matching.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    Two reasons:

    1. The biso settings are not adjusted well, and this different board has different settings, so you can only find the information yourself. The BIOS can be automatic, but it can also be manual, and the manual settings are designed to deal with things that aren't working properly, such as your current situation. After the memory dual-channel is automatically turned on, some motherboards and memory support are not very good, and the work is unstable.

    It is recommended that you still work on the BIOS and turn off the dual channel. There is also a discrete graphics card, you can also turn off the integrated display through the BIOS, since your motherboard BIOS auto-adjustment function is not normal, you don't expect it to automatically switch to the independent graphics card for you, or manually.

    2. The power supply of the motherboard is not enough, or the power supply is not enough. Whether it's memory or graphics card, as long as the motherboard doesn't supply enough power or the power supply is not enough, then stability is impossible.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    So Sa... You first tell me what game you are playing, what kind of game is the card, it should be caused by the integrated graphics card, and the video memory is not enough.

    Plug in the discrete graphics card and the display doesn't light up that means it doesn't light up The host doesn't turn on either the graphics card is broken or the graphics card is not plugged in.

    It has nothing to do with dual channels.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    This kind of machine you still play upgrades, it's a pain.

    Have you connected the display signal interface to the independent display? Remember to dust the slot before plugging it in.

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    The graphics card is fine, it's your memory problem, and that's the legendary memory incompatibility.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    First of all, I can't quite understand what the landlord means.

    "Computer hosts" include: motherboards, CPUs, cooling fans (or water cooling), power supplies, memory modules, hard drives, graphics cards, sound cards, cases, optical drives, floppy drives (almost no one uses them these days), card readers, and other devices (such as TV cards, hard drive protection cards, ......).)

    The landlord is talking about replacing a certain part in the "computer host".

    Or is it that the whole host is changed?

    If it's the whole thing, it's changed.

    This is a qualitative change in the host.

    Your question doesn't make much sense.

    Let's talk about parts.

    The memory of the graphics card (referred to as video memory) is mainly related to the following configurations.

    1.Graphics. When it comes to video memory, of course, the most closely related to it is the graphics card. First of all, you need to figure out whether you have a discrete graphics card or an integrated graphics card (that is, the graphics card and motherboard are done together. If it's an integrated graphics card, you can go straight to point 2.

    If it is a discrete graphics card, the size of the video memory is the main parameter of the graphics card, and now the mainstream video memory size is 256M-512M (this is the requirement of popularizing Windows Vista, of course, 128M can still be used), and DDR3 has gradually become the mainstream. If you change to a discrete graphics card, just look at whether the nominal value of the video memory on the manual is larger than the previous one. (provided that the graphics card you bought is qualified).

    2.Mainboard. If you're using an integrated graphics card, the video memory is all about your motherboard. For example, the motherboard I am using now is Foxconn G9657MA, which integrates GMA X3000 on the board, and I can choose to allocate 64M, 128M, 256M or Max (maximum) 4 system memory to the graphics card in the BOIS settings of the motherboard. Of course, the "allocation" here refers to the corresponding amount of memory on my motherboard (Kinstom DDR2 667 1G) allocated to the graphics card (I now choose 256M), and after the distribution, the memory available to the system will be reduced accordingly.

    If you change to a motherboard, it depends on what model of motherboard you have replaced and how much memory you can allocate to the graphics card.

    3.Memory sticks.

    In point 2, I just said that the system memory is allocated to the graphics card as video memory, provided that your motherboard supports this allocation relationship and the system memory is large enough. For example, if your system memory is only 128M, you can't allocate 256M to the graphics card. This allocation should be reasonable, for example, my current system memory size is 1G, and the system recommends that I divide 128M to the graphics card, but I chose to divide it into 256M, so the image is good to use, but the system becomes a little slow.

    So I'm thinking about buying the same memory module back to improve the speed and get ready for Vista in the future.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    The size of the video memory is determined by the memory chip, which is the hardware and is soldered to the graphics card. You just update the software when you install the driver, and there is no way to make the video memory bigger.

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    Are you changing the entire host? If you do that, the memory will definitely get bigger.

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    If you change the graphics card together, change to a graphics card with a larger memory than your current graphics card, and it will definitely follow.

    If your original graphics card supports dynamic memory sharing. The current memory is larger than the original, and if it is set up, it will be a little larger.

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    The computer console is replaced with a new one. The things in it haven't changed, so how can they get bigger?

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