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The worst you could get is the stick doesn't like the other sticks, but that's rarely the case.
You will however have the sticks running at the lowest speeds, and the highest timings, so match them up.
Wrong, he will still be able to use it in dual channel mode, but if he configures it wrong, he will have 12GB in one channel, and 4GB in the other, so only 4 of that 12 from the first channel will be dual channel.
The other 8GB will run in single channel, afaik.
But if your board has only 4 slots on a Dual Channel board and you install 3 modules they will run in Dual Channel as 2 slots are electrically connected to 1 channel. There is no other logical way. Its just hard on the memory controller, as it has to time one channel that splits up into 2 modules, and time one channel that only connects to 1 module. So frequencies and sometimes even stability become a problem.
Never mix any ram besides ram that matches, there was easy right. Common sense people!
Ultimately, for automagic configuration settings--and the stability it brings (if not always performance), get all the same and try not to mix and max if you don't have to.
I 'had' to, due to having one out of 8 of a matched set of 8 sticks for quad channel go bad due to what we can call misadventure. Not too unlike losing diskettes because the cat sat on them or something like that.
So, I had to get a replacement, and as luck would have it, no one sold 8 sticks of quad channel memory at a cheap price. I had to get something else, and opted for a smaller kit and rolled the dice.
I ended up having to use 6 of one type and 2 of the other, and then ran them all at the same speed. That worked, and has been stable for a few years now.
Configuration and timings and whatnot was very important to get right; it was a bit of a trial and error process as the XMP profiles never worked for me even when not mixing and matching; if at first you don't succeed, change the timings and try again...
and also need to deal with mixing ram freq and timings
it would be best to get a 2x8g kit or a matching 2x4g kit
If you do 4 modules, they do not all have to be the same size, but it helps to have the same specs.
For example...
2x 4gb Corsair LPX ddr4 3200 Cas 16
2x 8gb Corsair LPX ddr4 3200 Cas 16
Now these 4 can work in dual channel mode if installed properly.
Such as installed like this...
Slot1= 8gb
Slot2= 4gb
Slot3= 8gb
Slot4= 4gb
Not true. You can run full dual channel with 3 sticks. You simply have to put 2x4 GB in channel A and the 8GB in channel B. Dual channel requires both channels to have the same RAM capacity.
Also if you run with uneven channel capacity you not run in single channel, you run in flex mode.
https://steamcommunity.com/groups/Master_Race_Geeks/discussions/0/2747650363459040918/
Though mixing ram can have problems, BSOD's to random app crashes, or causing strange things in some apps.
I have a i7 920 with 2x Mushkin 8GB sticks paired with 2x Samsung 2GB sticks and that system has been running great.
Though I have had a system with 2x PNY sticks and tried pairing them with 2x Corsair sticks and that system refused to boot no matter what I did, both sets worked on their own flawlessly.