Athlon+1024 Mb RAM+FC3
Bill Gradwohl
bill at ycc.com
Wed Dec 22 23:54:08 UTC 2004
John Summerfield wrote:
>Define "matched." I bought them from the same supplier and they were in the
>same price range. I'd have thought that the supplier would ask questions if
>it were important.
>
>
>
>
Look at the actual chips on the modules. Compare the old ones to the new
ones. Even if they're identical, thats not enough to say that they
"match", as modern modules are actually programmed via an onboard
control chip to provide timing and other information on how the memory
chips themselves should function. The same physical module can be
"programmed" several different ways at the factory to provide RAM
appropriate to several different machines.
Also check you main board specs. Some mainboards require that modules be
populated in pairs. Put 4 modules in the wrong way and you get errors.
Put them in the correct way (a matched set per pair of ram slots) and
they work. Some mainboards are picky about the number of physical chips
per module. Too many chips draw too much current and the circuitry
supporting the chips can't handle the draw during memory intensive
operations.
Your best bet is to get all the RAM at one time from a supplier like
CRUCIAL for the particular mainboard you have. Crucial guarantees that
their RAM will work for any mainboard they support. We use them
exclusively and have done several hundred machines worth of RAM thru
them with 0 RMA's.
--
Bill Gradwohl
bill at ycc.com
http://www.ycc.com
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