Question Dell Desktop

Jan 23, 2025
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I have a Dell 3847. Born with W-8 and now has W-10. It has two sticks of memory at 4 GB each. It boots and loads rather slowly, but once it gets all loaded, it runs along just fine. I wondered if more memory might help it "get up and go" a little quicker? What would you recommend? I thought a couple of 8 GB sticks would do giving a total of 16 GB.

My second question has to do with my other PC. A Lenovo K330 with W-7. It has one stick at 8 GB and three more at 2 GB each for a total of 14 GB. This machine works just fine. Is it true that is the memory sticks are different GB's the machine will run at the speed of the smallest one? Thanks
 
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I have a Dell 3847. Born with W-8 and now has W-10. It has two sticks of memory at 4 GB each. It boots and loads rather slowly, but once it gets all loaded, it runs along just fine. I wondered if more memory might help it "get up and go" a little quicker? What would you recommend? I thought a couple of 8 GB sticks would do giving a total of 16 GB.

My second question has to do with my other PC. A Lenovo K330 with W-7. It has one stick at 8 GB and three more at 2 GB each for a total of 14 GB. This machine works just fine. Is it true that is the memory sticks are different GB's the machine will run at the speed of the smallest one? Thanks

A ssd would be the best bet for a little more speed out of that dinosaur.

And in regards to the second question; yes, for the most part.
 
I have a Dell 3847. Born with W-8 and now has W-10. It has two sticks of memory at 4 GB each. It boots and loads rather slowly, but once it gets all loaded, it runs along just fine. I wondered if more memory might help it "get up and go" a little quicker? What would you recommend? I thought a couple of 8 GB sticks would do giving a total of 16 GB.

My second question has to do with my other PC. A Lenovo K330 with W-7. It has one stick at 8 GB and three more at 2 GB each for a total of 14 GB. This machine works just fine. Is it true that is the memory sticks are different GB's the machine will run at the speed of the smallest one? Thanks
Free stuff for the dell.

Install the proper bios and drivers.
Make the startup group skinny.
Uninstall unneeded stuff.
Run a pass of defrag.
 
Is it true that is the memory sticks are different GB's the machine will run at the speed of the smallest one?
It's generally the speed of the slowest stick that determines the speed of the machine's memory bus, not the DIMM(s) with the lowest number of GB. You might have a fast 2GB stick and a slow 8GB stick.

This assumes the BIOS is capable of working its way through 4 dissimilar DIMMs and choosing the slowest timings for stability. You might be running one or more DIMMs faster than designed, if the BIOS selects timings from the first stick it encounters.

I wondered if more memory might help it "get up and go" a little quicker?
You already have 8GB which might be "enough" RAM if you don't run any really big programs. To check if you need more RAM, open Windows Task Manager, then open Resource Monitor and click on the Memory tab. Look at the Hard faults/s column and run a few programs. If you see hundreds of Hard faults and Task Manager shows the CPU at 100%, you need more RAM. If not, it's debatable that 16GB will make a huge difference.

If you decide to install more RAM, check the capacities are supported by the Dell and Lenovo. It would be a pity to buy a 16GB kit only to find it's not supported by the computer BIOS.

As others have said, by far the best upgrade to speed up an old computer is to fit a modern SATA SSD. You can clone your existing hard disk (Windows OS +programs + data) over to a SATA SSD, then unplug the hard disk and boot from the SSD. Much faster.
https://www.macrium.com/reflectfree

If your hard disk is 500GB, buy a 500GB SSD. If the hard disk is 1TB, a 1TB SSD would probably be a better option. 2.5" (laptop drive size) SATA SSDs are cheap these days and a splendid update for a slow hard disk. SSDs come in various capacities from 120GB to 4TB+. Do not buy a modern M.2 drive by mistake. Old computers don't have an M.2 slot.

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https://www.amazon.com/PNY-CS900-50...8-7-spons&sp_csd=d2lkZ2V0TmFtZT1zcF9tdGY&th=1

Go get.

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/software-download/windows10iso

Or if you do some home work.

https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/software-download/windows11

Add memory.

https://www.amazon.com/Timetec-1600...d=1738089796&sprefix=ddr3,aps,184&sr=8-3&th=1

Do a clean install of Windows 10 on fresh SSD with the added memory and bam the computer you never knew you had.

Your only out $40. + shipping.

If you like the results be happy. If your still feeling like it runs slow sell it.
 
I've upgraded an old laptop, and as others have said, if its boot speed is what is the problem, I'd definitely go with a SSD. Its been my experience that the start is mostly HDD vs SSD as far as speed. The one I upgraded boots super fast after going to a SSD. The memory I also upgraded, but that seems to be a speed as you go along, and you said once it boots it runs fine. Memory is fairly cheap now, So I'd do both if you can, but if you are only doing one and because it boots slow, the SSD is the route to go. IMHO
 
Where do I get his new SSD and I thought I should have 1TB. Also did you mean to tell me that I should upgrade my RAM? and where do I get the RAM? And I don't know what the $40.00 includes and where from. Thanks.
 
The SSD and the memory are on those links from amazon

SSD 500Gb
PNY CS900 500GB 3D NAND 2.5" SATA III Internal Solid State Drive (SSD) - (SSD7CS900-500-RB)
$25.99


Memory 16 Gb
Timetec 16GB KIT(2x8GB) DDR3L / DDR3 1600MHz (DDR3L-1600) PC3L-12800 / PC3-12800 Non-ECC Unbuffered 1.35V/1.5V CL11 2Rx8 Dual Rank 240 Pin UDIMM Desktop PC Computer Memory RAM(SDRAM) Module Upgrade

$14.99

I was off a buck $40.98

These were examples if you need a larger SSD get what you need.
 
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