dude thank you very much, youre like the only one talking about APUs or graphic cards but in the design/graphic software way, not only for gaming or video edition (space that is already saturated af)
These Ryzen igpus are so easy and fun to tweak, and they provide an excuse to tweak and upgrade other stuff too. I don't know why it's not more widely discussed. Allocating more memory, increasing igpu memory clock frequency (= fclk)...buying more RAM, and faster RAM (I'm still on AM4, they're giving DDR4 away), to increase amount of allocatable memory and raise RAM/fclk (igpu memory clock) frequency...With my 5600G, I play old games like SupCom 1/2, and new games like Factorio, maxed, 60+ fps. I'll get a separate card eventually, because I love graphics cards, but I've really enjoyed tweaking and using the igpu on this 5600G.
@@fitofficial6510 no its not as long as you have enough RAM allocated for other use like increase Vram to 4gb upto 8gb only when using a 16gb kit. and 9-16gb when using 32gbkit
Well, that's amazing. I am planning on getting an ASROCK DESKMINI and installing a 5700G. Then adjusting the VRAM to 8GB at least so I can run Stable Diffusion. My 3060Ti in my gaming setup only has 8GB of VRAM. ;)
ASRock B550 itx board does this as well, defaults to 512mb regardless. I had 32gb ram installed for 5700g and still only took 512mb. I could change it manually though, up to 16gb
since the E series apu's and the next gen apu's after that wich was the A variant on socket fm1 the settings were about the same as shown here. i had a A8 3870k (black edition) and that little quadcore apu was fine in crossfirex with the dedicated gpu as main graphics card and the apu as second gpu to help the dedicated gpu. however, the apu itself was a radeon hd 6550D and my gpu was a hd 6670 and it was not the greatest experience. however it was still better than any intel igpu back in 2012 when i built that system. with 8gb of ddr3 1866 mhz it was decent for that time. the 5600g is way better compared to my old apu. i would not recommend for gaming to leave this on auto since auto has a hard time auto adjusting the amount of memory correctly by itself. manually setting it a 2gb or more is recommended but don't go too high . 2gb or 4gb with 16 gb or ram would be more than enough and leave enough room for the system. what will really make a difference is memory speed and low latency memory like 2x8gb cl14 3200 mhz or even 3600 if you can afford it will make a big difference on performance . To get a simple and free boost of performance on 5000g apu's you can go in the uefi bios and go to tab A.I. tweaker > gpu boost > and set to turbo or extreme mode instead of auto will OC the igpu automatically on a recent asus board .with the latest bios, on turbo mode i got my 5600g at 2200mhz without any software overclocking on my asus prime b550m-a wifi. it is now about the equivalent to the performance of a zotac gt1050 OC 2gb card i compared it with. but on this asus board or any other recent motherboard it may apply to i would definitely look at the thermal throttle limit (TJmax) and lower it at 95 degrees instead of the 115 by default on auto unless you want to cook yourself some marshmallows in your system lol .
@@Pixovert well the advantages was the dual gpu, with low memory set to the igpu it cleared more ram for use by the system and the dedicated gpu had better graphics. the opposite would have made little sense. games compatible with crossfire were quite common but now it is not the case any longer most of the time but it allowed up to 25 to 35% more fps in games with dx10. it was a budget low cost system of around 850$ cdn to suit the familly needs both present and future for 8 to 10 years i carefully planned and optimized parts by parts. inverting the order of the gpu's was not easy , you had to enable crossfire with both displays connected igpu and gpu, undo crossfire mode then unplug the igpu then re-enable it . it was a workaround with some plug unplug cables and enabling/disabling the crossfire X mode to switch from igpu by default to gpu as main video output gpu. it was a nice low cost boost but i had to work hard for it lol. i had built that system for all the familly to use and to last around 8 to10 years, i still use the 850w gold semi-modular psu from ocz and the old 60 gigs ssd, a corsair force 3 , is still being used as i would a usb stick but it was my main drive for a long time. i have given the rest of the system to someone in need when i built my current system even tho one of the 2 bios's is now dead the other one still works fine on this sapphire pt-a8a75 pure platinum motherboard i had in this system for 8 years . i'm glad it went well for so long since it was what i planned initially when i built it. as for the 95 degrees TJmax , i agree it is a bit on the toasty side and i may lower it to something like 85 or 90 degrees celcius instead. i believe i have seen somewhere thet the 5000g apu's are still crossfirex compatible
@@yungrezzno763 Yes. Assigning more RAM is only useful for software which demands a minimum requirement. It won't be actually using more RAM. It's just so you can check the box.
ปีที่แล้ว
Exactly. Totally useless video. The system allocates as much memory to the GPU as needed at any given time. If the video poster would have took the time to do some tests, he would have realized that there is 0 performance difference between leaving it on auto versus allocating a ton of memory dedicated to the GPU. As a matter of fact you are taking away system ram even when the GPU doesn't actually needed it.
@ i know this is from long ago...but you suck man, didnt you listen well? "Ideally, this is supposedly set to auto by amd" "However, some systems do not scale at all"
On my mainboard [Gigabete A520M) I can only select up to 2GB which is also what Auto uses. If I select Game Optimized it ends up using 4GB instead. I still use Win10 in bios mode (CSM), once I enable uefi (disable CSM) in bios I can select up to 16GB. I won't go there for now
I have Ryzen 5700 G and 16GB RAM (2x8 3200). I use ASRock B550. Originally I had 512mb VRAM. I have the same selection menu (512mb-16GB). I can choose any value, but in windows the maximum value is 2GB VRAM. If I buy extra 16Gb will I get opportunity of using 4Gb VRAM ?
@@abhishekgeorge8626 Chech this th-cam.com/video/BUTYIPvSlqU/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=TIMS-PC . Now I have 16GB RAM 2x8 3200 and share 4Gb for VRAM. I play Forza Horizon 5 with 60 FPS, PUBG with 120 FPS.
Well details. Thanks for your knowledge. Can suggest some Budget motherboard for this . Need best overclocking. Could you tell a VGA Card for this Ryzen 7 5700G?
Will increasing dedicated vram help in gaming because shared memory is already 31gb+ (in your case). Because if gpu needs ram it can share it from shared memory.
Hello there. My motherboard is designed by hp and is for a laptop. Is this method exclusively for PC or can it be used for laptop motherboards as well?
I've got the ryzen 5560u which doesn't have a bios setting to change UMA frame buffer, this mean its VRAM or dedicated gpu memory is fixed at 512mb. This mean Edge crashes when you have too many tabs open. I can only think this is fixed in the drivers. ;(
Dear Thanks for the video. I have installed 8gb RAM in Asus laptop and it has Ryzen 3250 processor. The available RAM Is only 6 GB. If I set this UMA buffer to 512mb, will it be enough? I am not a gamer but doing some video editing using camtasia software. Will it reduce laptop performance or will add more performance? Please do reply dear.
@@iwilltouchyourtoes Some games are not aware of VRAM scaling. They detect 512M and then stick to it. :( Manual setting in BIOS exists to workaround such cases.
Hi please help me, I have done this and it works but after some days i changed the settings but now it goes to its default setting and not able to increase gpu memory also ram is not overclocking, whats the problem
Was only able to run 4x bluestacks 1core 2gbs of ram "per instance" with corsair 64gb of ram at 3600mhz the integrated graphics was running at 50% and something didnt seem right.. Went an gave this bad boy 16GBs of dedicated vram and now the graphics are running at 10% and running 5x blue stack instances. ryzen 5700G
I don't get what you said about needing to increase the minimum vram. You already said that it should scale to the needs of the application. i.e. photoshop, why why then would you ever need to increase it? Just to experiment I tried increasing the size on a Gigabyte mobo, but on reboot it changes itself back to auto.
Certain software (mostly games) may be not familiar with the concept of VRAM size dynamic scaling, and to mitigate this, there is that manual setting in BIOS. Otherwise, the Auto option should work fine.
if I go with RTX 3060 with Ryzen 5700g is they are going to combine well? I mean if I buy that with this processor is there any chance that I am going to face bottleneck?
I currently using 5700g with 3600hrs 32 gm ram and motherboard MSI b550 motor max wifi... I am using it for Motion & Graphic design, content creation, sometimes casual gaming, and sometimes a little bit of 3D rendering. That's all.
@@itanzil Bottleneck is always there regardless of configurations... unless you specifically only use one thing then you can see which one has bottleneck... Don't worry too much on bottlenecks with that configuration, a CPU demanding game will max out the CPU and same goes with graphics card. Just check the apps you are using which one demands more.... and monitor your CPU and GPU utilization and then you can roughly see which app is bottlenecked by CPU/GPU
Even if you have 64gb RAM I wouldn't assign more than 4GB for the video card. There won't be cases where the software is using more than those, and even if there is, the iGPU will take the ram if needed.
@@xismxist Yup! If it's for gaming it may be better to have more than 2gb reserved, but for normal software you won't notice the difference. I've heard the recent versions of Photoshop check if you have 4gb, tho, so it won't open if you don't have it.
Hello, very interesting, whereever i look, most people only put the UMA buffer to 4gb, i have never seen people up it to 16gb. I have a question, so i am using 5700G on a Jupiter X300 chipset ( ASRock ) and i am planning to use a 16x2 DDR4 Dual channel 3200Mhz Ram ( so 32Gb total RAM ) Would it be adviceable to set UMA buffer to 16GB using 32gb Ram? or should use 4gb is sufficient for normal gaming?
Gaming is still limited by bandwidth not capacity despite all the recent uproar over VRAM capacity. DDR4 3200 top out at about 25GB/sec. so rendering at 30 frames per second leaves you with less than one gigabyte that can actually be used to render frames. You'll see little to no performance improvement in gaming by allocating more than 4GB.
Hello guys, I am running a ryzen 5 3400g on a gigabyte B45M s2h motherboard with 16Gb of RAM. I have tryied everything in order to give more than 2Gb VRam to my system but in Bios the max setting for VRam is 2Gb. I want to bust the performance in order to be abble and play some more games. Its worth to buy some other RAM (32Gb 3600Mh with 75euro) in order to upgrade my VRam or to choose a GPU like 2060 super or 6700xt (with 200-350 euro). Thanks in advance!!
Increasing vram harmful for pc ? I manually set 2gb for vram. I have 1 stick 8gb ram. Now, gaming fps improved a lot but video rendering time increased
Hi, I'm also a content creator and I've got few questions. I'm soon going to get a new PC and I'm planning to get a AMD Ryzen 5700G with at least 16GB of RAM memory (speed 3.400Mhz). Is this similar to overclocking and could this damage/harm my PC? and what would u recommend me as a following components for my new PC, I was looking at Ryzen 7 5700G, 16GB RAM 3.400Mhz (yet unknown brand), some MSI motherboard (not more then 150$) and some SSD of around 500Gb of memory and some decent Power Supply. what do u think about that and could u give me some advice?
No its not like overclocking, u are just giving a part of ur RAM to ur VRAM, its does improve fps in most of the cases, and when u get ur pc dont forget to set ur RAM frequency to 3400MHz, because most of the time motherboards will automatically set ur RAM frequency to 2133MHZ or 2666MHz, so do that to get more fps
@@user-rw1xg4gy4u Well I was looking at something that would do a great job at some time before I het dedicated GPU (currently they r extremly expensive), I would mostly ide my PC for editong vidios, in programms like DaVinci Resolve and After Effects. Maybe some times playin' Arma 3 and CS:GO and thats it. I just want something that will be able to run those editing programms smoothly. And it would also be nice of that same CPU could later be just a CPU when I get dedicated GPU for my PC (in 2 or 3 yrs).
Auto generally seems best - but it's in my experience it's made not a jot of difference where I set it. But I understand the ability to reserve RAM to UMA buffer is largely there to allow for applications that react poorly if they do not see enough VRAM. Eg a game that refuses to launch without 4gb VRAM. Also. I know windows handles this "scale on demand" approach well, but I'm not sure all other operating systems (Linux?) would.
I use a RYZEN 5700G with 32GB memory clocked at 3200Mhz and I dedicate 8GB of memory exclusively to graphics. Is 8GB enough for Photoshop or do I reduce the 8GB to 4GB?
Hello Samael, I currently have RYZEN 5700G with 16GB or RAM and have increased the dedicated to 4GB. But I was thinking of getting 16GB more and do what you did and dedicate 8GB. Did you see a considerable increase in performance?
I'm assuming this is a BIOS limitation. :( On a Prime B550M-A I am only offered a 2GB UMA option (with 48GB RAM) while on a cheaper B450 S2H I can see 16GB available on a system with 16 GB RAM! After a BIOS update on Prime, I've got a 16GB option available for a short while but after a couple of reboots it is gone... :\ UPDATE: When CSM is enabled, options above 2GB are not available!
I just did this with my Ryzen 5 5600g w Radeon Graphics. I have 16gb of ram and set the VRAM usage to 4gb. Will this have a positive affect on my gaming performance?
Does it ?? I am also using the same config. But I have a doubt that if I set the vram to 8gb( 24gbs of RAM ) then would it increase my gaming performance ?
Does increasing VRAM make rendering faster? I am running Ryzen 7 5700G with integrated graphics. 64Gb RAM, 4GB dedicated VRAM. When rendering 4K, 4GB VRAM is being used. I want to increase it.
@@alexhunter0815 It may be necessary, for software not intelligent enough to understand that APU allocates VRAM dynamically. Otherwise Auto mode should do the job just fine.
I will be getting a laptop with a Ryzen 7 chip with Radeon 7 graphics with 2 gb vram should I make it 4 gb. Most of the games I will be playing need good graphics. Will there be any negative drawbacks
At 1st i was able finding the 4gb uma buffer size, but after tweaking here and there, funny me i stuck on bios with only 2gb max, please kindly enlight me how to revert back since i do kidna need that 'more uma buffer size back :(
In my case, sizes >2GB are not available when CSM is enabled under Boot section. Thus, to get those large UMA sizes back, you have to disable CSM and make sure your bootable drive is GPT-formatted to be seen by UEFI, otherwise OS won't boot. :(
If I upgrade my system ram (which I’m planning to do for other reasons other than increasing vram) will it automatically assign more system ram to dedicated vram?
dude thank you very much, youre like the only one talking about APUs or graphic cards but in the design/graphic software way, not only for gaming or video edition (space that is already saturated af)
These Ryzen igpus are so easy and fun to tweak, and they provide an excuse to tweak and upgrade other stuff too. I don't know why it's not more widely discussed. Allocating more memory, increasing igpu memory clock frequency (= fclk)...buying more RAM, and faster RAM (I'm still on AM4, they're giving DDR4 away), to increase amount of allocatable memory and raise RAM/fclk (igpu memory clock) frequency...With my 5600G, I play old games like SupCom 1/2, and new games like Factorio, maxed, 60+ fps. I'll get a separate card eventually, because I love graphics cards, but I've really enjoyed tweaking and using the igpu on this 5600G.
Do you know how to tweak Vega 8 on the Ryzen 3550h
Holy crap! You wasn't joking about the bios being a mess when trying to get this to work
Thanks for this, gonna try this when I finish building my new pc!
Amazing Video. I have increased the dedicated video on my Asus B550/5600G following your instruction going into BIOS. Many thanks for this video !!
what is your motherboard? and does it support 4gb vram?
hey! how's it working out for you?
Increasing vram harmful for pc ? First time
@@fitofficial6510 no its not
as long as you have enough RAM allocated for other use like increase Vram to 4gb upto 8gb only when using a 16gb kit. and 9-16gb when using 32gbkit
@@paulssnfuture2752 thanka
THANK YOU SO MUCH. I was having so much trouble trying to find where it was under my ASUS bios.
Well, that's amazing. I am planning on getting an ASROCK DESKMINI and installing a 5700G. Then adjusting the VRAM to 8GB at least so I can run Stable Diffusion. My 3060Ti in my gaming setup only has 8GB of VRAM. ;)
Super video mate 😉
Thank you very much!
ASRock B550 itx board does this as well, defaults to 512mb regardless. I had 32gb ram installed for 5700g and still only took 512mb. I could change it manually though, up to 16gb
since the E series apu's and the next gen apu's after that wich was the A variant on socket fm1 the settings were about the same as shown here. i had a A8 3870k (black edition) and that little quadcore apu was fine in crossfirex with the dedicated gpu as main graphics card and the apu as second gpu to help the dedicated gpu. however, the apu itself was a radeon hd 6550D and my gpu was a hd 6670 and it was not the greatest experience. however it was still better than any intel igpu back in 2012 when i built that system. with 8gb of ddr3 1866 mhz it was decent for that time. the 5600g is way better compared to my old apu. i would not recommend for gaming to leave this on auto since auto has a hard time auto adjusting the amount of memory correctly by itself. manually setting it a 2gb or more is recommended but don't go too high . 2gb or 4gb with 16 gb or ram would be more than enough and leave enough room for the system. what will really make a difference is memory speed and low latency memory like 2x8gb cl14 3200 mhz or even 3600 if you can afford it will make a big difference on performance .
To get a simple and free boost of performance on 5000g apu's you can go in the uefi bios and go to tab A.I. tweaker > gpu boost > and set to turbo or extreme mode instead of auto will OC the igpu automatically on a recent asus board .with the latest bios, on turbo mode i got my 5600g at 2200mhz without any software overclocking on my asus prime b550m-a wifi. it is now about the equivalent to the performance of a zotac gt1050 OC 2gb card i compared it with.
but on this asus board or any other recent motherboard it may apply to i would definitely look at the thermal throttle limit (TJmax) and lower it at 95 degrees instead of the 115 by default on auto unless you want to cook yourself some marshmallows in your system lol .
Great input Chirs. 95 degrees sounds pretty high still. What were the benefits / disadvantages of that crossfirex setup?
@@Pixovert well the advantages was the dual gpu, with low memory set to the igpu it cleared more ram for use by the system and the dedicated gpu had better graphics. the opposite would have made little sense. games compatible with crossfire were quite common but now it is not the case any longer most of the time but it allowed up to 25 to 35% more fps in games with dx10. it was a budget low cost system of around 850$ cdn to suit the familly needs both present and future for 8 to 10 years i carefully planned and optimized parts by parts.
inverting the order of the gpu's was not easy , you had to enable crossfire with both displays connected igpu and gpu, undo crossfire mode then unplug the igpu then re-enable it . it was a workaround with some plug unplug cables and enabling/disabling the crossfire X mode to switch from igpu by default to gpu as main video output gpu. it was a nice low cost boost but i had to work hard for it lol.
i had built that system for all the familly to use and to last around 8 to10 years, i still use the 850w gold semi-modular psu from ocz and the old 60 gigs ssd, a corsair force 3 , is still being used as i would a usb stick but it was my main drive for a long time. i have given the rest of the system to someone in need when i built my current system even tho one of the 2 bios's is now dead the other one still works fine on this sapphire pt-a8a75 pure platinum motherboard i had in this system for 8 years . i'm glad it went well for so long since it was what i planned initially when i built it.
as for the 95 degrees TJmax , i agree it is a bit on the toasty side and i may lower it to something like 85 or 90 degrees celcius instead.
i believe i have seen somewhere thet the 5000g apu's are still crossfirex compatible
It's supposed to scale to requirements so 512 is not 512mb . So unless you bench mark an improvement it's conjecture
So even though it says 512mb of vram , it will use 2gb of vram if needed?
@@yungrezzno763 supposed to , people benchmarking on gears tactics are getting higher vram usage than set
@@yungrezzno763 Yes. Assigning more RAM is only useful for software which demands a minimum requirement. It won't be actually using more RAM. It's just so you can check the box.
Exactly. Totally useless video. The system allocates as much memory to the GPU as needed at any given time. If the video poster would have took the time to do some tests, he would have realized that there is 0 performance difference between leaving it on auto versus allocating a ton of memory dedicated to the GPU. As a matter of fact you are taking away system ram even when the GPU doesn't actually needed it.
@ i know this is from long ago...but you suck man, didnt you listen well? "Ideally, this is supposedly set to auto by amd" "However, some systems do not scale at all"
On my mainboard [Gigabete A520M) I can only select up to 2GB which is also what Auto uses. If I select Game Optimized it ends up using 4GB instead. I still use Win10 in bios mode (CSM), once I enable uefi (disable CSM) in bios I can select up to 16GB. I won't go there for now
thank you very much
I have Ryzen 5700 G and 16GB RAM (2x8 3200). I use ASRock B550. Originally I had 512mb VRAM. I have the same selection menu (512mb-16GB). I can choose any value, but in windows the maximum value is 2GB VRAM. If I buy extra 16Gb will I get opportunity of using 4Gb VRAM ?
@alireza alizadeh I did as shown in this video th-cam.com/video/BUTYIPvSlqU/w-d-xo.html . Now I have 16GB RAM (2x8 3200) and 4Gb VRAM.
Do we get any performance increase in gaming?
@@abhishekgeorge8626 Chech this th-cam.com/video/BUTYIPvSlqU/w-d-xo.html&ab_channel=TIMS-PC . Now I have 16GB RAM 2x8 3200 and share 4Gb for VRAM. I play Forza Horizon 5 with 60 FPS, PUBG with 120 FPS.
How unlock the bios AMD?
@@nikosnickel99 th-cam.com/video/BUTYIPvSlqU/w-d-xo.html
Thank you, i got lucky and had the same uefi
This was super helpful. 🙏
Question: so once you set it to 16 GB, did you see a noticeable improvement in graphics performance or not?
Well details. Thanks for your knowledge.
Can suggest some Budget motherboard for this .
Need best overclocking.
Could you tell a VGA Card for this Ryzen 7 5700G?
Will increasing dedicated vram help in gaming because shared memory is already 31gb+ (in your case). Because if gpu needs ram it can share it from shared memory.
Excellent video. Is there a % boost in FPS?
Not really
they say rgb fans increased it
Hello there. My motherboard is designed by hp and is for a laptop. Is this method exclusively for PC or can it be used for laptop motherboards as well?
I've got the ryzen 5560u which doesn't have a bios setting to change UMA frame buffer, this mean its VRAM or dedicated gpu memory is fixed at 512mb. This mean Edge crashes when you have too many tabs open. I can only think this is fixed in the drivers. ;(
For examle on Witcher 3 I set it to 4GB and got a good increase of FPS! Thanks
Does this actually provide a solid boost?
Can we increase the vram more than 4gb ? Like 8gb vram ?
How much of an increase?
@@shr1939 it depends on how much Ram,cpu, motherboard u have
Dear Thanks for the video. I have installed 8gb RAM in Asus laptop and it has Ryzen 3250 processor. The available RAM Is only 6 GB.
If I set this UMA buffer to 512mb, will it be enough? I am not a gamer but doing some video editing using camtasia software.
Will it reduce laptop performance or will add more performance? Please do reply dear.
In my opinion this setting for the vram makes no sense: On my system with 16gb ram only 512mb but when more needed it scales up... automatically
Any idea how to make it do that? Mine is staying at 512 even when the game is maxing the vram
@@iwilltouchyourtoes Some games are not aware of VRAM scaling. They detect 512M and then stick to it. :( Manual setting in BIOS exists to workaround such cases.
@@sergeidubarev5079 yeah I've been using it set to 4GB for a while performance is a lot better now
What manufacturer & model of motherboard is this in reference to?
It doesn't matter because it's the same ram.
amd does not use northbridge for long time, its usually processed also by PCH
can u make some video about editing/rendering video using only that
Coming soon.
Hi please help me, I have done this and it works but after some days i changed the settings but now it goes to its default setting and not able to increase gpu memory also ram is not overclocking, whats the problem
How do you know if the scaling is working?
Wait so all you have to do is open bios and set to how many gb u want?
Have you test this on games?
hi i have 32gb of ram and i can only use 2gb under the drop menu? shouldnt i be able to use 16gb
it depends on the motherboard u r using sir
Why there's no setting to change UMA Frame Buzzer suze in my BIOS ? I looked in many section settings but i nothing there
Was only able to run 4x bluestacks 1core 2gbs of ram "per instance" with corsair 64gb of ram at 3600mhz the integrated graphics was running at 50% and something didnt seem right..
Went an gave this bad boy 16GBs of dedicated vram and now the graphics are running at 10% and running 5x blue stack instances.
ryzen 5700G
On what motherboard it gives option to take it to 16gb?
its harmful for Processor ?
only if it overheats
I don't get what you said about needing to increase the minimum vram. You already said that it should scale to the needs of the application. i.e. photoshop, why why then would you ever need to increase it?
Just to experiment I tried increasing the size on a Gigabyte mobo, but on reboot it changes itself back to auto.
Certain software (mostly games) may be not familiar with the concept of VRAM size dynamic scaling, and to mitigate this, there is that manual setting in BIOS. Otherwise, the Auto option should work fine.
Is 16g the max. If I do 64g can I do 32g vram? I do AI models.
if I go with RTX 3060 with Ryzen 5700g is they are going to combine well? I mean if I buy that with this processor is there any chance that I am going to face bottleneck?
Currently they work very well together, (sometimes the CPU will bottleneck and other times the GPU will, depending on task of course)
I currently using 5700g with 3600hrs 32 gm ram and motherboard MSI b550 motor max wifi...
I am using it for Motion & Graphic design, content creation, sometimes casual gaming, and sometimes a little bit of 3D rendering. That's all.
@@itanzil Bottleneck is always there regardless of configurations...
unless you specifically only use one thing then you can see which one has bottleneck...
Don't worry too much on bottlenecks with that configuration, a CPU demanding game will max out the CPU and same goes with graphics card.
Just check the apps you are using which one demands more.... and monitor your CPU and GPU utilization and then you can roughly see which app is bottlenecked by CPU/GPU
Even if you have 64gb RAM I wouldn't assign more than 4GB for the video card. There won't be cases where the software is using more than those, and even if there is, the iGPU will take the ram if needed.
Cryptomining or AI needs more VRAM, the more the better.
@@wurstelei1356 It would be pointless to use a iGPU for those.
So even if you set the integrated gpu to only 2 gb, it gonna use more if needed?
@@xismxist Yup! If it's for gaming it may be better to have more than 2gb reserved, but for normal software you won't notice the difference. I've heard the recent versions of Photoshop check if you have 4gb, tho, so it won't open if you don't have it.
@@jal051 That's the use of it, just set it to 8gb if you have 32gbkit and forget it. since no application will require 16gb as minimum for now
4g bőven elég nem kell 16 gb tul lassu ahoz a kártya.
How much will i get if i have 48gb ram?
Can you please help me? The max vram allowed for me to use is 2GB, even tho I have 24 GB of ram total
Thank you that was helpful.
Tip: try not so sigh
Hello, very interesting, whereever i look, most people only put the UMA buffer to 4gb, i have never seen people up it to 16gb.
I have a question, so i am using 5700G on a Jupiter X300 chipset ( ASRock ) and i am planning to use a 16x2 DDR4 Dual channel 3200Mhz Ram ( so 32Gb total RAM )
Would it be adviceable to set UMA buffer to 16GB using 32gb Ram? or should use 4gb is sufficient for normal gaming?
Gaming is still limited by bandwidth not capacity despite all the recent uproar over VRAM capacity. DDR4 3200 top out at about 25GB/sec. so rendering at 30 frames per second leaves you with less than one gigabyte that can actually be used to render frames. You'll see little to no performance improvement in gaming by allocating more than 4GB.
excuse me, my cpu is 5600g, how can I disable the igpu function since I bought a gtx 1660 ti gpu? thank you
Vc deixa a saida pci e limite a memoria ram da vram ele ignora os gráficos
There is an option in the bios
It would automatically not usable when a Dgraphics is installed with drivers.
Hello guys, I am running a ryzen 5 3400g on a gigabyte B45M s2h motherboard with 16Gb of RAM. I have tryied everything in order to give more than 2Gb VRam to my system but in Bios the max setting for VRam is 2Gb. I want to bust the performance in order to be abble and play some more games. Its worth to buy some other RAM (32Gb 3600Mh with 75euro) in order to upgrade my VRam or to choose a GPU like 2060 super or 6700xt (with 200-350 euro). Thanks in advance!!
hi sir may i ask why my uma only detects 2gb ? but i have 16gb of ram
Increasing vram harmful for pc ? I manually set 2gb for vram. I have 1 stick 8gb ram. Now, gaming fps improved a lot but video rendering time increased
but are you sure the gaming fps improved? I tried it too - no impact whatsoever
My BIOS don't have anything to change the ram settings the BIOS are super
Does this improve video editing too?
Yes
Such a shame it can't output 4k120HZ thru the motherboard's HDMI 2.1 port.
Do you game at 4K120 or is it content creation?
@@Pixovert Content creation but what I mostly need is ability to output 4k at 120HZ for videos I film with my camera that supports 4k 120HZ.
@@OKuusava I have enough HDD space.
How do you get to bios
So my pc only uses 512 mb of vram and has 1x8gb of ram, so adding another stick of 8gb won’t increase the vram ?
Nao so mudar na bios
Hi, I'm also a content creator and I've got few questions.
I'm soon going to get a new PC and I'm planning to get a AMD Ryzen 5700G with at least 16GB of RAM memory (speed 3.400Mhz).
Is this similar to overclocking and could this damage/harm my PC?
and what would u recommend me as a following components for my new PC, I was looking at Ryzen 7 5700G, 16GB RAM 3.400Mhz (yet unknown brand), some MSI motherboard (not more then 150$) and some SSD of around 500Gb of memory and some decent Power Supply.
what do u think about that and could u give me some advice?
No its not like overclocking, u are just giving a part of ur RAM to ur VRAM, its does improve fps in most of the cases, and when u get ur pc dont forget to set ur RAM frequency to 3400MHz, because most of the time motherboards will automatically set ur RAM frequency to 2133MHZ or 2666MHz, so do that to get more fps
Overclocking is when u force ur GPU or CPU to use more Frequency than its base frequency
And i would suggest u to get ryzen 5600g and a Dedicated gpu cuz thats more effective for ur budgey
@@user-rw1xg4gy4u Well I was looking at something that would do a great job at some time before I het dedicated GPU (currently they r extremly expensive), I would mostly ide my PC for editong vidios, in programms like DaVinci Resolve and After Effects.
Maybe some times playin' Arma 3 and CS:GO and thats it.
I just want something that will be able to run those editing programms smoothly.
And it would also be nice of that same CPU could later be just a CPU when I get dedicated GPU for my PC (in 2 or 3 yrs).
@@armata_555 the extra cores and threads will definitely help you but there's very little difference between igpu performance of 5600g and 5700g
Auto generally seems best - but it's in my experience it's made not a jot of difference where I set it.
But I understand the ability to reserve RAM to UMA buffer is largely there to allow for applications that react poorly if they do not see enough VRAM. Eg a game that refuses to launch without 4gb VRAM.
Also. I know windows handles this "scale on demand" approach well, but I'm not sure all other operating systems (Linux?) would.
Linux handles it very well in my experience.
I have asus notebook with 5700U.how dl i do this??
does it work with 5700U?
I have 16 GB of ram and when I tried to set my VRAM from 2 GB to 4 GB my bios did not give me the option it stops at 2 GB what should I do
It dependes on your motherboard, I have an asrock b550m pro4 with bios set for ryzen 5000G series and It let me ser UP to 16gb vram
@Alfonso Hunt a bit yes, no a great improvement
@wassim max maybe you need to update your bios
I use a RYZEN 5700G with 32GB memory clocked at 3200Mhz and I dedicate 8GB of memory exclusively to graphics. Is 8GB enough for Photoshop or do I reduce the 8GB to 4GB?
If you have 32gb ram, can you set your igpu to use 16 of them? Plz help.
Hello Samael, I currently have RYZEN 5700G with 16GB or RAM and have increased the dedicated to 4GB. But I was thinking of getting 16GB more and do what you did and dedicate 8GB. Did you see a considerable increase in performance?
My new and updated ROG Strix b550-e only offers max 8gb. Even though I have 32gb ram. Anone an idea whats going on here?
I'm assuming this is a BIOS limitation. :( On a Prime B550M-A I am only offered a 2GB UMA option (with 48GB RAM) while on a cheaper B450 S2H I can see 16GB available on a system with 16 GB RAM! After a BIOS update on Prime, I've got a 16GB option available for a short while but after a couple of reboots it is gone... :\ UPDATE: When CSM is enabled, options above 2GB are not available!
can i do this proccess in my MSI MAG B550 tomahawk motherboard? my sys is using 16 gb's of 2667 memory dual channel with this 5700g?
yes
I cant find that sett in my bios
Hi, I've ryzen 5 5600g, vram shows only 512 mb while playing. Can I increase the vram and does increasing vram void the warranty ?
It doesn't void the warranty.
Enter to te bios
I just did this with my Ryzen 5 5600g w Radeon Graphics. I have 16gb of ram and set the VRAM usage to 4gb. Will this have a positive affect on my gaming performance?
Does it ?? I am also using the same config. But I have a doubt that if I set the vram to 8gb( 24gbs of RAM ) then would it increase my gaming performance ?
It will improve your graphics
@@khutsohlase243 I got a gpu a bit ago lol
I have 5700g when I render in 3ds max cpu goes 100% and ram 16gb almost 15gb 😠
Does increasing VRAM make rendering faster? I am running Ryzen 7 5700G with integrated graphics. 64Gb RAM, 4GB dedicated VRAM.
When rendering 4K, 4GB VRAM is being used. I want to increase it.
Is working for a ryzen 7 4700u with integrated graphic card?
did u find an answer?
Yes, I can't add more vram but the CPU it takes more ram when he needed.
in laptops ? hp 5700u? how change vram?
You can't and not necessary.
@@alexhunter0815 It may be necessary, for software not intelligent enough to understand that APU allocates VRAM dynamically. Otherwise Auto mode should do the job just fine.
@@sergeidubarev5079 Yes but not every BIOS has this setting. In my case not
I will be getting a laptop with a Ryzen 7 chip with Radeon 7 graphics with 2 gb vram should I make it 4 gb. Most of the games I will be playing need good graphics. Will there be any negative drawbacks
Great to work on ai on low cost
I thought u were going to run some benchmarks on it? lol
At 1st i was able finding the 4gb uma buffer size, but after tweaking here and there, funny me i stuck on bios with only 2gb max, please kindly enlight me how to revert back since i do kidna need that 'more uma buffer size back :(
Same
In my case, sizes >2GB are not available when CSM is enabled under Boot section. Thus, to get those large UMA sizes back, you have to disable CSM and make sure your bootable drive is GPT-formatted to be seen by UEFI, otherwise OS won't boot. :(
It depends on the motherboard, nothing can be done about that but to change your mother board
If I upgrade my system ram (which I’m planning to do for other reasons other than increasing vram) will it automatically assign more system ram to dedicated vram?
If you get 16gb of ram you set it up to be 4gb, if you got 32 you can make it 8gb and so on.
@@thiccupcake thanks mate :)
It won't automatically change it because the Auto option already takes the RAM it needs at any time
Run stable disfussion
If you're sighing I'll be moaning.
Desempenho 512m vs 16g mesma bosta.
then go buy a video card this is what video cards are for this video is foolishness 🙄🙄🙄🙄