How To Speed Up Your Old PC

How To Speed Up Your Old PC

Christmas is over, and it’s time to start buying for yourself again. Consider treating yourself with a gift that will keep giving for years to come: upgraded computer components. These are minor upgrades you can install yourself (no repair shop required) and will save you so much time over when writing, shopping, or just waiting for your ageing PC to boot up, you’ll wonder why you spent so long with a spinning disk in your computer.

Image credit: Yutaka Tsutano/Flickr

Before You Buy, Check the Specs

Before you pay for any components, get a handle on your system’s specifications so you know which components you can purchase. RAM is available in multiple form factors, clock speeds, and latency levels, while storage drives can use different interfaces like SATA, PCIe, mSATA, or M.2. It all gets a bit confusing, so just focus on using the same interface or form factor, while boosting the amount of memory or storage space.

Windows 10

In Windows 10, you can check your system specifications in a few ways — most involving digging through system settings and sifting through every component in your PC, looking for the right numbers and letters in a component’s name to figure out its technical specifications. The easier method involves downloading Speccy, which scans your system hardware to give you the relevant information you need for upgrading your PC. You’ll get a summary of the parts in your PC, and see what kind of memory, storage interface, graphics card, and processor you have. Keep that information handy, as you’ll need it to filter your search for parts online.

How To Speed Up Your Old PC

If you’d rather not add a new app to your computer, you can hit Ctrl-Alt-Del, select Task Manager, then hit the Performance tab to get an overview of your CPU, memory, and disk storage. You’ll see the information you need about your memory, graphics card, and hard disk.

You can also hit the Start menu, and search for System Information. There you’ll get a list of all the hardware that makes up your PC, including the type of RAM, storage, and graphics card in your machine.

macOS

Hit the apple icon in the top-left of your display, then select About My Mac. You’ll see a simplified overview of the hardware in your Mac, including hard disk size, memory, and CPU. Select System Report to see a more in-depth list of all the hardware that makes up your Mac, along with the information about your memory and storage, two upgradeable components depending on the type of Mac you own.

How To Speed Up Your Old PC

Find Compatible Parts

Once you’ve got the type of components you need down, you can use a site like PC Part Picker, which makes it easy to find the part you’re looking for from whichever retailer has it available. You can browse by individual components, and filter your options based on compatibility with your system. If you’re buying parts for an Apple computer, check OWC or Macfixit, which specialises in Mac components.

Upgrade Your SSD First

Solid-state drives are now cheap enough that there’s no excuse for you to be stuck with an obsolete, slow, spinning hard disk drive. SSDs can nearly triple your computer’s performance by eliminating the moving parts involved when using a hard disk drive. If you have a motherboard with an M.2 slot, make sure you get a compatible M.2 SSD, one using a faster PCIe interface.

Get More RAM

The more memory in your PC, the more tabs you can have open at once, the less time you’ll spend waiting for apps to manage large files like photos or videos, and the more apps you can use at the same time. You don’t need to spend all your cash buying 16GB of RAM (unless you’re doing some heavy video editing); 8GB will do just fine. Ensure you choose the right form factor (look for something like SO-DIMM, or DDR4 in your system’s RAM synopsis) so you buy one that actually fits in your motherboard.

Get a New Video Card for Prettier Games

You don’t need to buy a $US300 ($387) video card with a robot on the box to play recent video games on your PC on something other than the “Low” quality setting. If your PC doesn’t have one, spending under $US100 ($129) can get you a graphics card perfect for enjoying fast-paced games in 720p, or less demanding games at 1080p. Your PC won’t be running any VR games, but adding a graphics card also means you’ll be able to drive multiple monitors at once. Because everyone loves being distracted.


This story has been updated since its original publication.


The Cheapest NBN 50 Plans

Here are the cheapest plans available for Australia’s most popular NBN speed tier.

At Lifehacker, we independently select and write about stuff we love and think you'll like too. We have affiliate and advertising partnerships, which means we may collect a share of sales or other compensation from the links on this page. BTW – prices are accurate and items in stock at the time of posting.

Comments


7 responses to “How To Speed Up Your Old PC”