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Llama 3.3 70B Instruct (Q5_K_S) — 23.5 GBon Scaleway L4-1-24G

Meta
Code Multilingual Tool Calls
Q5_K_S Scaleway L4-1-24G

Overview

Llama 3.3 70B Instruct is a 70B parameter dense language model by Meta, with code, multilingual, tool-calls capabilities. It supports a context window of up to 131,072 tokens.

Llama 3.3 70B Instruct is a 70-billion-parameter dense transformer model from Meta, optimized for instruction following, code generation, and multilingual conversation. It delivers performance competitive with larger models in the Llama family while remaining practical for single-node GPU deployments. The model supports tool calling and eight languages including English, French, Spanish, and German. With a 128K context window and grouped-query attention, it quantizes efficiently down to Q4 levels for self-hosted inference on consumer hardware.

At Q5_K_S quantization (medium quality tier), the model weighs 45.32 GB. This exceeds the 24 GB of VRAM on Scaleway L4-1-24G. Inference is still possible via CPU offload or memory-mapped loading from disk, but expect significantly reduced performance.

The NVIDIA L4 is a datacenter inference GPU with 24 GB of GDDR6 VRAM and 300 GB/s memory bandwidth. It delivers 121 FP16 TFLOPS with Ada Lovelace architecture. Designed for efficient, low-power inference workloads in cloud and edge deployments. Handles quantized models up to 20B parameters.

Hardware Requirements

Model size 45.32 GB
VRAM available 24 GB
VRAM used 23.5 GB
System RAM 48 GB
Min RAM required 23.2 GB
GPU layers 39 / 80
Context size 512
Backend cuda13
Flash attention Yes

Performance Notes

Deploy

Prerequisites

Ensure your GPU nodes are prepared with the NVIDIA container toolkit:

ansible-playbook prositronic.infra.nvidia_container_toolkit

Command

helmfile --state-values-file <(curl -s https://www.prositronic.eu/values/llama-3-3-70b-instruct/q5_k_s/nvidia-l4.yaml) apply

Generated values.yaml

/values/llama-3-3-70b-instruct/q5_k_s/nvidia-l4.yaml

Loading values…

Frequently Asked Questions

How much VRAM does Llama 3.3 70B Instruct (Q5_K_S) need?

The Q5_K_S quantization of Llama 3.3 70B Instruct requires 45.32 GB. 39 of 80 layers fit in the 24 GB of VRAM on Scaleway L4-1-24G; remaining layers are offloaded to CPU.

Can I run Llama 3.3 70B Instruct on Scaleway L4-1-24G?

Yes, with reduced performance. Scaleway L4-1-24G can run Llama 3.3 70B Instruct (Q5_K_S), but only 39 of 80 layers fit in VRAM. The rest are offloaded to CPU.

What is quantization?

Quantization reduces a model's numerical precision from its original floating-point format to a more compact representation. This shrinks the file size and VRAM footprint, making it possible to run large models on consumer hardware. The trade-off is a small reduction in output quality. Q5_K_S compresses Llama 3.3 70B Instruct from its original size down to 45.32 GB.

What quantization should I choose for Llama 3.3 70B Instruct?

Q5_K_S is a medium-quality quantization. Higher-quality quants (Q8, Q6) preserve more model accuracy but need more VRAM. Lower quants (Q4, Q3, Q2) reduce VRAM usage at the cost of some quality. Choose based on your available hardware and quality requirements.

What is flash attention and why is it enabled?

Flash attention is a memory-efficient algorithm that speeds up the attention mechanism in transformer models. It reduces VRAM usage during inference by avoiding the materialisation of the full attention matrix. For Llama 3.3 70B Instruct on Scaleway L4-1-24G, flash attention is enabled to maximise context length and throughput within the available 24 GB of VRAM.

Why are some layers offloaded to CPU?

Scaleway L4-1-24G has 24 GB of VRAM, but Llama 3.3 70B Instruct (Q5_K_S) requires approximately 45.32 GB. Only 39 of 80 layers fit in VRAM; the remaining layers run on CPU, which is slower but still functional.

How do I run Llama 3.3 70B Instruct (Q5_K_S) with Ollama?

Run ollama run llama3.3:70b-instruct-q5_k_s to start Llama 3.3 70B Instruct (Q5_K_S). Ollama handles downloading the model weights automatically on first run.

Last updated: March 5, 2026