[SOLVED] How to Increase a Dedicated Video Ram (VRAM)?

Haji13680201

Commendable
Apr 20, 2019
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hi my system pc
ram 32 gig
min biostare z97x
cpu 4790k
vga only onboard intel 4600
please see this photo of manual min

https://gofile.io/d/BhQDq8

How to Increase a Dedicated Video Ram (VRAM) in bios??


What settings and which one should I change?
Which one should I change? How much?

Internal Graphics ?
Aperture Size For Haswell ?
DVMT Pre-Allocated ?
DVMT Total Gfx Mem ?
 
Solution
To be fair, we've all answered your question and elaborated on it. I'm not sure why you're persisting / repeating the question. What is the issue exactly? Why do you need to increase vram size? As said already, you wont see any performance increase from allocating more vram unless a program requires it to run.

Your psu is more than powerful enough (assuming it's good quality), why 1200w if not planning to add a graphics card? If new to computers and not sure of the difference, well, modern entry level graphics cards are multiple times faster compared to the igpu that resides in your processor.
'DVMT Pre-Allocated', to pre-allocate Dynamic video memory of maximum 1GB is the setting. This will set a minimum limit the OS will put aside as dedicated vram. It's not often an application or game requires 1GB vram to start but this will help launch any that do.

Besides setting a minimum, the maximum vram allocation is actually automatic and will use as much of your ram it can when applicable. So there is no maximum amount you can set, only minimum. Therefor, if you don't have any app/game that requires a certain amount of vram to run then you can leave this setting on default.
 
'DVMT Pre-Allocated', to pre-allocate Dynamic video memory of maximum 1GB is the setting. This will set a minimum limit the OS will put aside as dedicated vram. It's not often an application or game requires 1GB vram to start but this will help launch any that do.

Besides setting a minimum, the maximum vram allocation is actually automatic and will use as much of your ram it can when applicable. So there is no maximum amount you can set, only minimum. Therefor, if you don't have any app/game that requires a certain amount of vram to run then you can leave this setting on default.
thanks
i am a gamer and play more game s
I would. Make the most of onboard graphics. (maximum vram)..
 
ح
Maybe think about getting a Gtx 1650 if budget allows. That'll be a day/night difference in comparison. Wouldn't require much of a psu to run.

What psu do you have?
my psu 1200 w
Increase a Video Ram (VRAM) in bios
I change? How much?

Internal Graphics ?
Aperture Size For Haswell ?
DVMT Pre-Allocated ?
DVMT Total Gfx Mem ?
 
To be fair, we've all answered your question and elaborated on it. I'm not sure why you're persisting / repeating the question. What is the issue exactly? Why do you need to increase vram size? As said already, you wont see any performance increase from allocating more vram unless a program requires it to run.

Your psu is more than powerful enough (assuming it's good quality), why 1200w if not planning to add a graphics card? If new to computers and not sure of the difference, well, modern entry level graphics cards are multiple times faster compared to the igpu that resides in your processor.
 
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Solution