Activity › Forums › Apple Final Cut Pro Legacy › Ram, total 4GB or 6GB
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Ram, total 4GB or 6GB
Posted by Gary Alan on November 9, 2007 at 1:26 amGoing to uograde a Mac Pro Quad 3Ghz system that has 2GB ram. Should I “add” 2 more gb or 4 more gb? Using all the apps-FCS, PS, AE, AI, C4D, etc. with 30″ Apple LCD.
Thanx,
GaryMac Pro Intel Quad, 2GB RAM, 30″ Apple Display
MacBook Pro 17″ matte screen, 2GB RAMBradley Hopper replied 16 years, 2 months ago 5 Members · 9 Replies -
9 Replies
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Aaron Neitz
November 9, 2007 at 1:59 amWell that’s easy. always put as much as you can afford in it.
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Jeremy Garchow
November 9, 2007 at 3:20 amRAM should be installed in matching pairs when using FCP. Be sure to keep that in mind when upgrading. Check this out for details:
https://docs.info.apple.com/article.html?artnum=304492
Jeremy
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Gary Alan
November 10, 2007 at 2:15 amI already knew knew about matched pairs. I am just wondering if 6GB is not that useful over 4GB in the system I mentioned. I have seen posts/articles in the past that said something about 4 being the sweet spot. I was wondering if that might still be true.
Gary
Mac Pro Intel Quad, 2GB RAM, 30″ Apple Display
MacBook Pro 17″ matte screen, 2GB RAM -
Jeremy Garchow
November 10, 2007 at 2:47 am[GaryAlan] “something about 4 being the sweet spot.”
I think that was between cost and performance and based on 8 GB total of RAM in a G5. Now, MacPros can hold 32Gigs. Crazy. I’d say get as much as you can, with 4 being a minimum, preferably from the same vendor (you don’t have to get Apple’s).
Jeremy
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Dave Jenkins
November 11, 2007 at 12:38 amIf you look at the article Jeremy posted it also talks about the ram adding up to 2, 4 or 8 gigs. We have four gigs in our machine and I wanted to add more but the next step for optimum performance is 8 gigs.
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Gary Alan
November 11, 2007 at 1:09 amDave,
What article are you talking about? Jeremy made reference to a link for Apple on Ram and it says nothing about using 6GB. Just the matched pairs. Which is why I only have 2GB in my MacBook Pro 17″ I bought last January instead of the 3GB max.
Possibly you are referring to some article not in this thread or I am missing somehow? What is the reason why someone would make a 4 GB leap in performance sweet spot over 2 GB as an addition? 6 GB are matched pairs. If it is the fact because there are four cores, then why would 2GB be considered as a sweet spot?
Gary
Mac Pro Intel Quad, 2GB RAM, 30″ Apple Display
MacBook Pro 17″ matte screen, 2GB RAM -
Dave Jenkins
November 11, 2007 at 3:13 amWell unless your installing 2 x 512 chips of ram I can’t see how you can add up to 6 gigs of ram. I have 2 x 1 Gig in Riser A and 2 x 1 GIG in Riser B = 4 Gigs. So unless my math is incorrect which it may well be, according to that chart I should add the same ram set up for optimal performance which would equal 8 Gigs. Doesn’t that make sense or am I reading that chart incorrectly?
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Gary Alan
November 11, 2007 at 5:39 amI have a system with 2GB ram using matched pairs. I can add another set of 1GB matched pair (2GB) to get 4GB total or I can add another set of matched pair 2GB (4GB) to get 6GB total.
G
Mac Pro Intel Quad, 2GB RAM, 30″ Apple Display
MacBook Pro 17″ matte screen, 2GB RAM -
Bradley Hopper
February 20, 2010 at 6:12 pmI am in exactly the same situation, have you found an answer yet? I have two 1GBs installed, one in Riser A DIMM1, the other in Riser B DIMM1. I’m looking at buying 4GB (2 x 2GB), but would this offset the pairing of the existing ones? Or do I have to remove the 1GBs and just install the new 4GB?
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