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Date: | Tue, 6 Mar 2001 23:49:58 -0500 |
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Bev:
The some VX chipset motherboards had trouble recognizing SDRAM larger than
16MB. Some VX motherboards could go to 32MB if the DIMMs were double-sided
(with 16 memory-chips). Check your motherboard manual for supported DIMM
types and sizes.
VX chipset motherboards also had problems with SDRAM modules with SPD-EEPROM.
There may also be a voltage problem. Perhaps your motherboard uses 5 volt
DIMMs. And, as Tom said, your motherboard may require EDO or fast page DIMMs.
VX was a "value" chipset of an older technology (Pentium P54C) when
synchronous RAM, lower voltages and systems with 64MB+ were being
introduced. The TX chipset was the VX's replacement but Intel wanted the
line to die off so people would migrate to P-II.
You may have to set a motherboard jumper to recognize your DIMM. The
motherboard manual (or the maker's website) should be able to guide you.
Good luck.
John Chin
>-----Original Message-----
>From: bev clark
>Sent: March 05, 2001 5:28 PM
>
>I have a Pentium 120 (I430 VX chipset) that came with 16mB DIMM.
>I want to upgrade the memory. I have a PC66 32 mB synchronous DIMM memory
>that my BIOS will not autodetect. If I leave the settings as they were
>for the 16mB memory the computer will not boot....
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