How much ram?
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Hi all; I hope all are well and safe.
I am about to buy a CanaKit Rasberry Pi 4 kit, but it comes with different amounts of RAM.
I know usually the more the better applies in computing, but all I will be using it for is for RetroPi; how much RAM will I need to be able to play any of the PlayStation/n64 games as smoothly as the actual console?I currently have a raspberry Pi, but keep encountering issues with sound and general lagging whilst playing Mario-Kart for example; I don’t know how much RAM my current unit has, or know how o check sorry; it was given as a gift.
Thank you all for any insight you can provide to help.
What do you guys think about CanaKit?I’m thinking of getting the self-cooling edition with 4GB ram.
Thanks
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The 1 or 2Gb models are fine also, more RAM doesn't add to emulation performance. The only factor when getting another model is other usages for the Pi (desktop machine/server).
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@mitu Would the amount of ram have an impact on the feel of the interface, and the initial load of the ISO, especially if they're compressed though?
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@mitu that makes sense; I mean 4gb wasn’t even a thing back in the PlayStation days haha.
I think the lowest version of CanaKit has 4gb; so that would be the one to get then I guess.
Another question open to all:
What is the noise like on the kits that have fans?
CanaKit have recently released an aluminium, self-cooling kit which doesn’t need a fan.
Does anyone have one of these? Are they indeed better than having a fan? -
@kookamunga No.
What is the noise like on the kits that have fans?
Unless you intend to overclock, there's no need for a fan with a cooling case. I don't have a fan, so can't say much about noise.
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@gamerphil I have a Villros kit with a fan and I only realize that it's on when the TV is off.
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@simpleethat said in How much ram?:
I have a Villros kit with a fan and I only realize that it's on when the TV is off.
if you connect the fan to the 3.3V GPIO Pin you shouldn't be able to hear it at all.
i tested my fan with the 5V and 3.3V GPIO Pin and found that 5V was too noisy for my taste. At 3.3V, i can barely hear it and it still provides enough cooling without the noise.
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@dreamcastkid good idea. Thanks 🙏
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I used an Arduino breadboard controller to turn my fan on and off. Also, 2.
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