- Nov 14, 2003
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If your motherboard requires DDR 1600 DIMMS can you use higher rated DIMMs (2100, 2400, etc) in it?
Probably.Originally posted by: jmucchiello
Then why do they still sell 1600 RAM when it usually costs more than the more current RAM? Is it just to gouge people who can't ask questions at a site like this?
Originally posted by: Peter
Absolutely. Just look at how many shops charge a premium for "rare" PC100 SDRAM.
the problem isn't the fact that the new memory is pc133Originally posted by: jmucchiello
Originally posted by: Peter
Absolutely. Just look at how many shops charge a premium for "rare" PC100 SDRAM.
Actually I just got burned by this. I bought some PC133 SDRAM for a machine spec'd for PC100 SDRAM and the system doesn't recognize the DIMMs. It had a single 128M PC100 DIMM and replaced it with two 256M PC133 DIMMs and got a memory on boot. Tried the new DIMMs one at a time. Nada. Mixed the pc100 and pc133 DIMMs and the BIOS only reported 128M of ram and that the other DIMM slot was empty.
Any way to fix this?
Motherboard specs say it supports up to 512M and there are only 2 DIMM slots on the board so why wouldn't 2 256M DIMMs work/be recognized?Originally posted by: Boonesmithe problem isn't the fact that the new memory is pc133
most likely your board only supports low density dimms and the stick of pc133 that you bought is probably high density (you can buy low density pc133)
im not talking about dimm size.. i was saying your board probably doesnt support high density dimms (you can buy low density 256mb pc133 dimms)Originally posted by: jmucchiello
Motherboard specs say it supports up to 512M and there are only 2 DIMM slots on the board so why wouldn't 2 256M DIMMs work/be recognized?Originally posted by: Boonesmithe problem isn't the fact that the new memory is pc133
most likely your board only supports low density dimms and the stick of pc133 that you bought is probably high density (you can buy low density pc133)
What measurement indicates density? This is the information I have from hp: hp.comOriginally posted by: Boonesmi
im not talking about dimm size.. i was saying your board probably doesnt support high density dimms (you can buy low density 256mb pc133 dimms)
its not a measurementOriginally posted by: jmucchiello
What measurement indicates density? This is the information I have from hp: hp.comOriginally posted by: Boonesmi
im not talking about dimm size.. i was saying your board probably doesnt support high density dimms (you can buy low density 256mb pc133 dimms)
So it is assumed to be high denisity? Is there any way to be sure? Could the same problem occur with PC100 SDRAM?
if i remember right pretty much all pc100 is low density (but im not 100% sure about that)Originally posted by: kamper
So it is assumed to be high denisity? Is there any way to be sure? Could the same problem occur with PC100 SDRAM?
Bump! I'd like to know the anser to this question too.