At this price level, I would suggest using an air cooler and saving money for a GPU with more VRAM, or even buying secondhand a lightly used GPU if it means you can afford more VRAM. 8GB is currently the bare minimum recommended VRAM.
Hey! Thanks for your comment, that is a good suggestion but you will only be saving $100-150. If you are doing it professionally for work etc buying a 4060 to begin with is not a problem. I have been using a 3060 and 16GB of ram for 1-2 years for professional work with no issues what so ever. You only start getting lag when you start getting into bigger and more demanding projects. For a beginner this is perfect and future proof as the only thing that would need to be upgraded is the GPU!
When it comes to a second hand GPU it is okay, but I try to stay away from second hand ones due to bit mining and warranty issues. Buying new secures you with 3 years warranty for most GPU's.
@@RenderRite I have purchased used GPUs people who were willing to invite me into their home for a test and also from Microcenter, a larger electronics store here in the USA. In each case, was able to get a transferred warranty. Most GPUs will be very durable and have a long lifespan. The best way to make sure that it is working properly in is to buy it in person from a trusted source.
@@RenderRite Architectural projects often include poorly optimized scenes so that while these scenes are relatively simple, it is easy to burn through 8GB. 8GB might be enough for well optimized games but might not be enough for poorly optimized scenes often encountered in a professional setting.
@@eltamarindo Good point, and you're right that poorly optimized scenes can eat up memory quickly. However, with Twinmotion, the RTX 4060 can still handle many demanding architectural projects quite well, especially with optimizations in place. While 8GB might be limiting for unoptimized scenes, most users can avoid hitting that ceiling by managing assets better and adjusting settings like LODs and textures. Of course, for larger, highly detailed projects, having more VRAM would be beneficial, but the 4060 is still a solid option for many professional workflows! 😁
nice budget build! great stuff 👍
Thanks! That was the aim 😁
Great video 👍
Thanks! ☺
Finally.. nice to meet you.
You too! 🙌😁
Which CPU, GPU did you use?
Hi there! I used the AMD Ryzen 5 7600 and RTX 4060 Windforce OC 8GB! Thanks 😊
👏👏👏👏
👋👋👋👋
At this price level, I would suggest using an air cooler and saving money for a GPU with more VRAM, or even buying secondhand a lightly used GPU if it means you can afford more VRAM. 8GB is currently the bare minimum recommended VRAM.
Hey! Thanks for your comment, that is a good suggestion but you will only be saving $100-150. If you are doing it professionally for work etc buying a 4060 to begin with is not a problem. I have been using a 3060 and 16GB of ram for 1-2 years for professional work with no issues what so ever. You only start getting lag when you start getting into bigger and more demanding projects. For a beginner this is perfect and future proof as the only thing that would need to be upgraded is the GPU!
When it comes to a second hand GPU it is okay, but I try to stay away from second hand ones due to bit mining and warranty issues. Buying new secures you with 3 years warranty for most GPU's.
@@RenderRite I have purchased used GPUs people who were willing to invite me into their home for a test and also from Microcenter, a larger electronics store here in the USA. In each case, was able to get a transferred warranty. Most GPUs will be very durable and have a long lifespan. The best way to make sure that it is working properly in is to buy it in person from a trusted source.
@@RenderRite Architectural projects often include poorly optimized scenes so that while these scenes are relatively simple, it is easy to burn through 8GB. 8GB might be enough for well optimized games but might not be enough for poorly optimized scenes often encountered in a professional setting.
@@eltamarindo Good point, and you're right that poorly optimized scenes can eat up memory quickly. However, with Twinmotion, the RTX 4060 can still handle many demanding architectural projects quite well, especially with optimizations in place. While 8GB might be limiting for unoptimized scenes, most users can avoid hitting that ceiling by managing assets better and adjusting settings like LODs and textures. Of course, for larger, highly detailed projects, having more VRAM would be beneficial, but the 4060 is still a solid option for many professional workflows! 😁