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I have a mother board with 4 memory slots. At present holding 2X 512Mb PC3200 DDR RAM. I am wondering whether to:
a) get another 2X 1Gb PC3200 DDR RAM (filling all the slots),
b) buy 2X 1Gb PC4000 DDR RAM and removing the old PC3200 chip. This way I would have faster memory, but less of it.

Any thoughts on what is best to do?

2007-04-17 20:45:25 · 5 answers · asked by just my opinion 2 in Computers & Internet Hardware Other - Hardware

5 answers

Ram runs quickest when spead across the most amount of modules.

So you would be better off buying the 2 x 1gb 3200 ram, leaving you with 3Gb. You'll never notice the difference between Pc3200 and PC4000 anyhow to be honest.

Don't mix speeds of ram, because it's running on the same bus it will all only operate as fast as the weakest link IE the Pc3200, so your 4000 will be wasted.

2007-04-17 21:18:54 · answer #1 · answered by Gophur 2 · 1 0

Read the manual of the mother board. Some times, there are 2 slots for one kind of ram and 2 more slots for a different kind of ram. Older mother boards had slots for DDR ram and then slots for SDRAM.

You can't mix the two.

2007-04-17 20:54:32 · answer #2 · answered by my_alias_id 6 · 0 0

Why dont you
get 2x 1Gb extra ram PC 4000
set the PC 4000 sam in slot A of the mem board
& the PC 3200 RAM in SLOT B
i.e.
the ram should fit in like
1.1G 4000
2 512 MB 3200
3.1G 4000
4.512 MB 3200

giving both speed (4000 will work at 400 Mhz & 3200 at 333 Mhz) as well as space.

2007-04-17 20:51:01 · answer #3 · answered by necromancer 3 · 0 0

you need to have a guide that got here including your pc. it truly is both in ebook form, or it is going to likely be positioned on between the CD's that got here including your pc. in basic terms examine the area on RAM and observe no matter if it truly is twin channel or no longer.

2016-12-04 05:57:30 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The easiest way to figure all this out is to have the program at Crucial analyse it. Run http://www.crucial.com/systemscanner/

It will detail all your options.

2007-04-17 21:06:02 · answer #5 · answered by Jim 7 · 1 0

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