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4 dimms is more load on cpus imc and may not hit the rams rated specs
for psu, stick to the known good ones, imho its not worth risking the entire build on a poor one
https://pcpartpicker.com/products/power-supply/#A=750000000000,2050000000000&e=4&m=337,11,14,71&sort=price&page=1
4060ti is ~165w, should be ok with a good 600w psu
Which should be interpreted to mean that it can draw a maximum of 750W without causing PSU failure, but you always must have a PSU greater capacity than maximum consumption. The tricky part is that you can't calculate the maximum consumption because of the changing factors, so it's always good to have the headroom as you have now.
If your computer requires 400W for example, the power supply will draw 400W.
RTX4060TI and i5 11600K are balanced.
24in. must have a VRF of at least 144hz, you're going cheap in the wrong places.
https://www.nvidia.com/en-us/geforce/graphics-cards/40-series/rtx-4060-4060ti/
https://www.amd.com/en/products/graphics/desktops/radeon/7000-series/amd-radeon-rx-7600.html
please quit spreading lies
and most 600+w have inrush limiting so they do not blow fuses when charging its mains 400v caps
if the psu would blow its fuse when you plug it in, then its a poor design to begin with
https://linustechtips.com/topic/1315737-corsair-rm750-v2-click-sound/
and more ram does not need a bigger psu
its ~5-10w per dimm
if the psu is too weak to run an extra dimm or two, then you are way to close to its limits for the build, and it would be tripping its protections, or falling out of atx spec when running a game or stress test
These fuses have specific ratings and your home's electrical wiring is based on them. I won't be surprised if you melt the installation some day.
if you replace a 15a breaker with 20-30a breaker you risk burning your house down
as for holding playable fps, depends on the game and settings
If it's so oversized that you're running under (or over) roughly 50% load, the mains conversion is a little inefficient, but it's a minor inefficiency and you'd worry about the 80+ efficiency rating before that, if electrical consumption is a concern at all. It might be better to go bigger if you can on your budget anyway because that saves you from having to buy a new power supply if you upgrade to a more power hungry system later down the line.
750 watts is more than enough for a 95 watt T.D.P. 11600k and a 165~ watt T.D.P. 4060 Ti. If we go by Corsair's advice[www.corsair.com] of G.P.U. T.D.P. + C.P.U. T.D.P. + 300, 600-650 watts would suffice depending on the 4060 ti variant, and that's including some headroom for upgrades. We're also not being solicited for build advice beyond whether or not the system will blow up (it won't) and I doubt most of us are in a position to whip up better suggestions parts based on the Argentinian marketplace.
its only about 16mb for frame buffer per 1080p display
4k is about 64mb
in games, its the textures and models that need vram, not the res
solitare, sure 240hz is fine at 4k
maybe halo or old dx8-9 3d games should do 4k at 60+ fps
it does not have too little vram to do it
it does not need a 800+w psu
you can always run games at 1080p on the 4k display, double pixeled will still look good
either use gpu scaling, or the display to scale it
the 4060/ti is not a strong gpu
but it can do most games at 1080p mid+ settings just fine