You can use AGP graphics card with any type of memory DDR. DDR2, DDR3. Graphics card memory type does not have any relation with memory type used on your PC's motherboard.
- Neeraj Sharma
I believe this answer is incorrect. I have found that some motherboards have onboard graphics which are connected to the pci slots. This creates a connection with a PCI graphics card, and the differences in RAM type will indeed cause problems for the driver and the OS.
Bill Newman
GPU memory is independent of the motherboard that runs its own memory. You can have only one type of memory on a motherboard, ie. DDR3, and have a graphics card with built in DDR5 memory. Short answer is yes, they are independent of each other.
What memory your motherboard can use will depend entirely on your motherboard. There is no way for someone to answer a generic question like this.I can add a personal note that I did upgrade my dad's laptop to contain one 1GB stick as well as the 512MB it came with. Of course, I have no idea what motherboard it has (or even what manufacturer it is).
The Accellerated Graphics Port card uses memory completely separate from the motherboard memory. They don't mix. Make sure you use the memory that the AGP card nees in the AGP card, and memory that the motheroboard needs in the motherboard. If you do that, everything will be ok.
You can get memory with more capacity, but your motherboard probably doesn't accept faster memory (533 or 667 memory).
Short answer: yes it will work.The DDR3 memory on the graphics card is mounted in the GPU's PCB. Power regulation and clock signals for that memory is regulated by the GPU.The DDR2 memory on the motherboard is a completely separate situation with the voltage and clock signal being regulated on the motherboard. The two memory banks have little, if anything to do with each other.A PCIe GPU will work in any PCIe motherboard slot.
You have mentioned both a graphics card and a motherboard there. You can add memory to the motherboard in the form of RAM sticks, but you cannot add memory to the graphics card. You can "trick" the computer into thinking it has more memory by allotting space oh the hard disk to be used for graphics memory but this will decrease performance as the hard disk is much slower and is generally not reccomended
IF YOUR COMPUTER IS HAVING A MOTHERBOARD WITH ONBOARD GRAPHICS THEN YOU CAN SIMPLY INCREASE THE AMOUNT OF V MEMORY USUALLY 128,256,512.IF YOU HAVE A GRAPHICS CARD THEN onboard graphics shouldn't be turned on as it may cause conflicts.If you want more memory on a video card you will have to upgrade to a new card with more memory..sorry there's no other option for this.
Read motherboard manual and look memory slots.............
Sorry to say you cannot. You would need to increase the size of your graphics card. That is if its a card.If its onboard graphics, then in the bios, you will see a graphics tab. Increase this to add some memory to the graphics.But in doing this, your detracting from your ram. And this could mean a memory upgrade.
depends on the motherboard, but average would be 4gb.
OnBoard memory is internal memory which is soldered to the motherboard as all compters need memory. it is normal for all computers have have memory upgrade slots. not all onboard memory can be removed,
The motherboard doesn't contain cache. The chips do, but the motherboard contain RAM modules. Like when you hear a PC has 512MB of memory. The cache (memory on the chip) follows lines called a bus to the RAM (memory on the motherboard).Answer: Level 3