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I recently built a new system and did a clean install of Vista Ultimate 64.
The system has 8GB of Physical RAM (DDR2) clocked at 1098 and a E8500 clocked at 3.47 Ghz. Everything is running very stable for a few weeks now. When I look at the system report I see that Windows is setting up 16GB of Virtual Memory which seems excessive, I can't help but wonder if it wouldn't be better for me to set the VM myself instead of letting Windows handle it; however I have no idea what setting would be optimal? I have a single 740 GB Hard Disk installed, I have listed the Vista system report below. I did a search for this information and could find very little credible information regarding VM settings for Vista 64 Ultimate using 8GB of Ram. OS Name Microsoft® Windows Vista™ Ultimate Version 6.0.6001 Service Pack 1 Build 6001 Other OS Description Not Available OS Manufacturer Microsoft Corporation System Name My-PC System Manufacturer Gigabyte Technology Co., Ltd. System Model X48-DQ6 System Type x64-based PC Processor Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU E8500 @ 3.16GHz, 3477 Mhz, 2 Core(s), 2 Logical Processor(s) BIOS Version/Date Award Software International, Inc. F6, 2/29/2008 SMBIOS Version 2.4 Windows Directory C:\Windows System Directory C:\Windows\system32 Boot Device \Device\HarddiskVolume1 Locale United States Hardware Abstraction Layer Version = "6.0.6001.18000" User Name Lou-PC\Lou Time Zone Eastern Daylight Time Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 8.00 GB Total Physical Memory 4.00 GB Available Physical Memory 6.78 GB Total Virtual Memory 16.1 GB Available Virtual Memory 14.9 GB Page File Space 8.29 GB Page File C:\pagefile.sys |
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You have a large HD, let win handle virtual memory
"Max" wrote in message ... I recently built a new system and did a clean install of Vista Ultimate 64. The system has 8GB of Physical RAM (DDR2) clocked at 1098 and a E8500 clocked at 3.47 Ghz. Everything is running very stable for a few weeks now. When I look at the system report I see that Windows is setting up 16GB of Virtual Memory which seems excessive, I can't help but wonder if it wouldn't be better for me to set the VM myself instead of letting Windows handle it; however I have no idea what setting would be optimal? I have a single 740 GB Hard Disk installed, I have listed the Vista system report below. I did a search for this information and could find very little credible information regarding VM settings for Vista 64 Ultimate using 8GB of Ram. OS Name Microsoft® Windows VistaT Ultimate Version 6.0.6001 Service Pack 1 Build 6001 Other OS Description Not Available OS Manufacturer Microsoft Corporation System Name My-PC System Manufacturer Gigabyte Technology Co., Ltd. System Model X48-DQ6 System Type x64-based PC Processor Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU E8500 @ 3.16GHz, 3477 Mhz, 2 Core(s), 2 Logical Processor(s) BIOS Version/Date Award Software International, Inc. F6, 2/29/2008 SMBIOS Version 2.4 Windows Directory C:\Windows System Directory C:\Windows\system32 Boot Device \Device\HarddiskVolume1 Locale United States Hardware Abstraction Layer Version = "6.0.6001.18000" User Name Lou-PC\Lou Time Zone Eastern Daylight Time Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 8.00 GB Total Physical Memory 4.00 GB Available Physical Memory 6.78 GB Total Virtual Memory 16.1 GB Available Virtual Memory 14.9 GB Page File Space 8.29 GB Page File C:\pagefile.sys |
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One and half to twice as much of physical RAM is optimal. You can set it
yourself to 12 GB to 16 GB. It doesn't really matter, as you have the hard drive space, and it probably rarely hits the virtual memory, anyway with that much RAM. But, if you want to lower it, I'd probably only go with 12 GB. -- Dustin Harper http://www.vistarip.com | Vista Resource & Information Page Was this helpful? Then click the Ratings button. Voting helps the web interface. http://www.microsoft.com/wn3/locales...eAPostAsAnswer "Max" wrote in message ... I recently built a new system and did a clean install of Vista Ultimate 64. The system has 8GB of Physical RAM (DDR2) clocked at 1098 and a E8500 clocked at 3.47 Ghz. Everything is running very stable for a few weeks now. When I look at the system report I see that Windows is setting up 16GB of Virtual Memory which seems excessive, I can't help but wonder if it wouldn't be better for me to set the VM myself instead of letting Windows handle it; however I have no idea what setting would be optimal? I have a single 740 GB Hard Disk installed, I have listed the Vista system report below. I did a search for this information and could find very little credible information regarding VM settings for Vista 64 Ultimate using 8GB of Ram. OS Name Microsoft® Windows Vista™ Ultimate Version 6.0.6001 Service Pack 1 Build 6001 Other OS Description Not Available OS Manufacturer Microsoft Corporation System Name My-PC System Manufacturer Gigabyte Technology Co., Ltd. System Model X48-DQ6 System Type x64-based PC Processor Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU E8500 @ 3.16GHz, 3477 Mhz, 2 Core(s), 2 Logical Processor(s) BIOS Version/Date Award Software International, Inc. F6, 2/29/2008 SMBIOS Version 2.4 Windows Directory C:\Windows System Directory C:\Windows\system32 Boot Device \Device\HarddiskVolume1 Locale United States Hardware Abstraction Layer Version = "6.0.6001.18000" User Name Lou-PC\Lou Time Zone Eastern Daylight Time Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 8.00 GB Total Physical Memory 4.00 GB Available Physical Memory 6.78 GB Total Virtual Memory 16.1 GB Available Virtual Memory 14.9 GB Page File Space 8.29 GB Page File C:\pagefile.sys |
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"Dustin Harper" wrote: One and half to twice as much of physical RAM is optimal. You can set it yourself to 12 GB to 16 GB. It doesn't really matter, as you have the hard drive space, and it probably rarely hits the virtual memory, anyway with that much RAM. But, if you want to lower it, I'd probably only go with 12 GB. -- Dustin Harper http://www.vistarip.com | Vista Resource & Information Page Was this helpful? Then click the Ratings button. Voting helps the web interface. http://www.microsoft.com/wn3/locales...eAPostAsAnswer "Max" wrote in message ... I recently built a new system and did a clean install of Vista Ultimate 64. The system has 8GB of Physical RAM (DDR2) clocked at 1098 and a E8500 clocked at 3.47 Ghz. Everything is running very stable for a few weeks now. When I look at the system report I see that Windows is setting up 16GB of Virtual Memory which seems excessive, I can't help but wonder if it wouldn't be better for me to set the VM myself instead of letting Windows handle it; however I have no idea what setting would be optimal? I have a single 740 GB Hard Disk installed, I have listed the Vista system report below. I did a search for this information and could find very little credible information regarding VM settings for Vista 64 Ultimate using 8GB of Ram. OS Name Microsoft® Windows Vista™ Ultimate Version 6.0.6001 Service Pack 1 Build 6001 Other OS Description Not Available OS Manufacturer Microsoft Corporation System Name My-PC System Manufacturer Gigabyte Technology Co., Ltd. System Model X48-DQ6 System Type x64-based PC Processor Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU E8500 @ 3.16GHz, 3477 Mhz, 2 Core(s), 2 Logical Processor(s) BIOS Version/Date Award Software International, Inc. F6, 2/29/2008 SMBIOS Version 2.4 Windows Directory C:\Windows System Directory C:\Windows\system32 Boot Device \Device\HarddiskVolume1 Locale United States Hardware Abstraction Layer Version = "6.0.6001.18000" User Name Lou-PC\Lou Time Zone Eastern Daylight Time Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 8.00 GB Total Physical Memory 4.00 GB Available Physical Memory 6.78 GB Total Virtual Memory 16.1 GB Available Virtual Memory 14.9 GB Page File Space 8.29 GB Page File C:\pagefile.sys |
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"Dustin Harper" wrote: One and half to twice as much of physical RAM is optimal. You can set it yourself to 12 GB to 16 GB. It doesn't really matter, as you have the hard drive space, and it probably rarely hits the virtual memory, anyway with that much RAM. But, if you want to lower it, I'd probably only go with 12 GB. -- Dustin Harper http://www.vistarip.com | Vista Resource & Information Page Was this helpful? Then click the Ratings button. Voting helps the web interface. http://www.microsoft.com/wn3/locales...eAPostAsAnswer "Max" wrote in message ... I recently built a new system and did a clean install of Vista Ultimate 64. The system has 8GB of Physical RAM (DDR2) clocked at 1098 and a E8500 clocked at 3.47 Ghz. Everything is running very stable for a few weeks now. When I look at the system report I see that Windows is setting up 16GB of Virtual Memory which seems excessive, I can't help but wonder if it wouldn't be better for me to set the VM myself instead of letting Windows handle it; however I have no idea what setting would be optimal? I have a single 740 GB Hard Disk installed, I have listed the Vista system report below. I did a search for this information and could find very little credible information regarding VM settings for Vista 64 Ultimate using 8GB of Ram. OS Name Microsoft® Windows Vista™ Ultimate Version 6.0.6001 Service Pack 1 Build 6001 Other OS Description Not Available OS Manufacturer Microsoft Corporation System Name My-PC System Manufacturer Gigabyte Technology Co., Ltd. System Model X48-DQ6 System Type x64-based PC Processor Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU E8500 @ 3.16GHz, 3477 Mhz, 2 Core(s), 2 Logical Processor(s) BIOS Version/Date Award Software International, Inc. F6, 2/29/2008 SMBIOS Version 2.4 Windows Directory C:\Windows System Directory C:\Windows\system32 Boot Device \Device\HarddiskVolume1 Locale United States Hardware Abstraction Layer Version = "6.0.6001.18000" User Name Lou-PC\Lou Time Zone Eastern Daylight Time Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 8.00 GB Total Physical Memory 4.00 GB Available Physical Memory 6.78 GB Total Virtual Memory 16.1 GB Available Virtual Memory 14.9 GB Page File Space 8.29 GB Page File C:\pagefile.sys Thank you Dustin, I will follow your advice, I never mentioned this, however a big reason for my asking about is; Windows seems to take a bit longer to start when I went for 4GB of ram to 8 GB and programs like IE seem to take alonger to open. I play many games on my system like Crysis, Mass effect, Age of Conan and the stability with 8GB has been fine; however I can't help but wonder if with windows managing all those addressess spaces 8GB physical 16GB Virtual it causes the longer start time and load times? Or maybe it just in my head, I havent actually tested it? |
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Logic!
More Memory, more addressing available, quicker loading! -- Mick Murphy - Qld - Australia "Max" wrote: "Dustin Harper" wrote: One and half to twice as much of physical RAM is optimal. You can set it yourself to 12 GB to 16 GB. It doesn't really matter, as you have the hard drive space, and it probably rarely hits the virtual memory, anyway with that much RAM. But, if you want to lower it, I'd probably only go with 12 GB. -- Dustin Harper http://www.vistarip.com | Vista Resource & Information Page Was this helpful? Then click the Ratings button. Voting helps the web interface. http://www.microsoft.com/wn3/locales...eAPostAsAnswer "Max" wrote in message ... I recently built a new system and did a clean install of Vista Ultimate 64. The system has 8GB of Physical RAM (DDR2) clocked at 1098 and a E8500 clocked at 3.47 Ghz. Everything is running very stable for a few weeks now. When I look at the system report I see that Windows is setting up 16GB of Virtual Memory which seems excessive, I can't help but wonder if it wouldn't be better for me to set the VM myself instead of letting Windows handle it; however I have no idea what setting would be optimal? I have a single 740 GB Hard Disk installed, I have listed the Vista system report below. I did a search for this information and could find very little credible information regarding VM settings for Vista 64 Ultimate using 8GB of Ram. OS Name Microsoft® Windows Vista™ Ultimate Version 6.0.6001 Service Pack 1 Build 6001 Other OS Description Not Available OS Manufacturer Microsoft Corporation System Name My-PC System Manufacturer Gigabyte Technology Co., Ltd. System Model X48-DQ6 System Type x64-based PC Processor Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU E8500 @ 3.16GHz, 3477 Mhz, 2 Core(s), 2 Logical Processor(s) BIOS Version/Date Award Software International, Inc. F6, 2/29/2008 SMBIOS Version 2.4 Windows Directory C:\Windows System Directory C:\Windows\system32 Boot Device \Device\HarddiskVolume1 Locale United States Hardware Abstraction Layer Version = "6.0.6001.18000" User Name Lou-PC\Lou Time Zone Eastern Daylight Time Installed Physical Memory (RAM) 8.00 GB Total Physical Memory 4.00 GB Available Physical Memory 6.78 GB Total Virtual Memory 16.1 GB Available Virtual Memory 14.9 GB Page File Space 8.29 GB Page File C:\pagefile.sys Thank you Dustin, I will follow your advice, I never mentioned this, however a big reason for my asking about is; Windows seems to take a bit longer to start when I went for 4GB of ram to 8 GB and programs like IE seem to take alonger to open. I play many games on my system like Crysis, Mass effect, Age of Conan and the stability with 8GB has been fine; however I can't help but wonder if with windows managing all those addressess spaces 8GB physical 16GB Virtual it causes the longer start time and load times? Or maybe it just in my head, I havent actually tested it? |