this post was submitted on 02 Jun 2024
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If you aren't upgrading your CPU, make sure the new motherboard is still compatible with it.
i guess I would. my CPU is as old as the MoBo. its a I7 4770K (which came out in 2013 RIP), i think that proves i made a great investment back then for my PC to still run great after 10+ years Oo...
4th Gen. Intel only supports DDR3 which maxes out at 32 gigs of ram across the 4 sockets. You’d need to upgrade your entire CPU/MOBO/RAM to get more than 32.
Getting a new mobo you can only sidegrade at best. You could get z97 for M.2 NVME support, but not more ram.
Oh no, be careful here. Your old cpu uses the LGA 1150 socket type. You probably can't find any recently manufactured motherboards that target that socket type.
When new CPU architectures are released, the socket type is usually changed as well and they're not always compatible with older versions.
My usual rule is that when upgrading the mobo or CPU, always upgrade the other as well.
Typically when looking at upgrades, I upgrade the cpu, mobo, and ram together. Since a new mobo normally means support for faster cpu/ram (and possibly a new socket, so a new cpu is needed anyways), it makes sense to upgrade the 3 at the same time.