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I just bought a pc3200 sdram for my AMD athlon 2600 plus. My comp has Windows Vista Home premium. When i restarted my computer up my rating for my comp dropped for some reason. It was 2.4 before and now it is a 1.8. I had 512 mb of ram before and now i have 1 gb. I dont get it it says i installed 1 gb but why did my rating drop? I took the ram out and reinstalled it. And the rating is the same thing. Plz help

2007-04-11 11:33:31 · 5 answers · asked by CharlesX 2 in Computers & Internet Hardware Desktops

P.S
My ram before was a ddr pc2700 333 mhz. The one i just bought rite now was a pc 3200 ddr sdram 400 mhz.

2007-04-11 12:26:20 · update #1

I went to this link http://www.cpuid.com/cpuz.php and downloaded the software. When i went to the memory tab there was no number under the frequency. And when i went to see how much ram is in each ram it only said that one slot was filled up. When two slots are already. And it still says i have 1024 ram. I dont get it.

2007-04-14 17:35:53 · update #2

My level two has higher latency. The first level has 3 cycles and the second has 20 cycles. For the size it is 64 kp and the level two is 256kb

2007-04-14 17:40:29 · update #3

5 answers

Download and install CPUZ from here:
http://www.cpuid.com/cpuz.php

Check which has slowed down, processor or memory.

Your AthlonXP 2600+ should have a core clock of 2.13Ghz (or 1.92Ghz if Barton core).

Under memory tab, frequency should read 200 (x2=400mhz).

If one or both are not right, restart computer then enter BIOS (by pressing Del or F2) before Windows start loading. Once you are on the blue BIOS screen, load default settings, save and close. Processor and memory should go to default speeds. If not, you might need to manually set them in BIOS.

Hope this helps.

2007-04-11 12:40:55 · answer #1 · answered by Karz 7 · 0 0

that's general for 32-bit variations of residing house windows computer operating structures. you are able to lose everywhere from 256MB to 1GB because of the the want to order handle area for memory-mapped I/O gadgets. A sixty 4-bit version of residing house windows received't have this problem, or a 32-bit version of residing house windows that helps PAE (actual handle extension) once you start up the computing device, the BIOS could wisely stumble upon all 4GB or RAM.

2016-12-03 21:03:47 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Maybe the newer ram might be slower than the old one. Or if I were you I would just ignore it, cause the comp. will still run faster than before.

2007-04-11 11:47:57 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

the ram that you installed might night be rated as high or it might have a higher cas latency. do you know what the speed of the old ram was? such as pc3500 or higher?

2007-04-11 11:43:22 · answer #4 · answered by geoff_jetblack 1 · 0 0

psssssst- (whispering): I think your computer is posessed.

2007-04-11 12:02:45 · answer #5 · answered by robertson_c92 2 · 0 0

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