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Solve : Memory Issue? |
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Answer» Quote from: The Saviour on July 13, 2007, 07:42:58 PM There's a free PROGRAM out there called CPU-Z. Something you may want to take a look at. CPU-Z is awesome - perfect for a slightly compulsive (and CONTROLLING) person like me. According to the program all 4GB of memory are recognized in the slots and are working, all the specs are exactly the same for each memory module. Thank you for the idea though, I'm keeping CPU-Z for future uses as well.Also, I did notice in CUP-Z that the PC3200 RAM is showing as 200MHz instead of the 400MHz we bought. Anyone know anything about a result like that? And would that affect the memory count? Edited: Nevermind, apparently that has something to do with the dual-channel mode.I don't think this has been mentioned but its something you could try. Start with removing the power cable and then grounding yourself and opening the case. Then remove all RAM STICKS. Place one in the socket closest to the CPU. Check, should be 1gB. Continue this until there is missing 'RAM'. If you have a remaining stick swap it with the previous one and if the problem still occurs, if it does then either your motherboard does not support something, has a jumper setting wrong, BIOS setting is wrong or not latest version (in which this problem was fixed?). Or, I think more likely you have an EDITION of XP that does not support the amount of RAM you are inserting. Personally, I would like some justification as to why 4gB of RAM is required, as that is a rather large amount for a HOME PC...Edit (I've changed my answer) I've been doing some researching on this issue and there seems to be a lot of confusion and trouble with win xp and 4 gigs of ram. The following page explains why you're not seeing the full 4 gigs of ram. http://www.crucial.com/kb/answer.asp?qid=4251 So basically you can't utilize the full 4 gigs of ram.Quote from: Deerpark on July 14, 2007, 03:39:41 AM Edit (I've changed my answer) That's not the issue here, though. He has 4GB installed. Neither the BIOS nor the PC is seeing the full 4GB. Read the first post. There's a full Gig of memory missing. I'd try this... Rearrange the memory in their slots one at a time. See if this solves the problem. Latency and frequency differences may cause the additional RAM not to be recognized. Here's a read: http://www.techspot.com/vb/topic38345.htmlBut both the online tool at IBM and CPU-Z recognizes the full 4 gigs. Why the bios isn't reporting the correct amount is puzzling but I think it must be a bug in the bios, because if a module wasn't working there is no way the other tools could report 4 gigs. |
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