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Date: | Mon, 23 Jul 2001 22:33:33 -0400 |
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Greetings Julie & list
----- Original Message -----
From: "Julie Scorer" <[log in to unmask]>
> Hi,
> I have a Pentium 150 on a Rhino 12 motherboard and running Windows 98se.
> The MB has 4 simm and 1 dimm slots and I had 48mb memory made up of
> 1x32mb dimm (Pc66) + 4x4mb simm. A friend who was upgrading gave me 1
stick
> of 64mb dimm (PC100) so I replaced my 32 mb dimm with it, hoping
> to get 80 mb altogether. On booting up I was surprised to see only 48mb,
> so obviously only 32 of the 64 mb were recognised.
It is possible that your motherboard will simply not recognize any more than
32 MB of RAM in that DIMM slot. I just upgraded (somewhat) a computer
for an office I help support. I increased the RAM from 16 to 64 MB. It was
not possible to do this using any combination of DIMM + SIMM, and the
DIMM slot was limited to 32 MB. This was an Elite Group motherboard
(perhaps ca. 1997) and it also had 4 72-pin SIMM slots and one 168-pin
DIMM slot. The manual gave many possible combinations up to a maximum
of 128 MB of RAM (if memory serves), and using a DIMM would have maxed
it out at 32 MB. I don't even know if MHz speed of the RAM was a factor,
though I suspect that 66 MHz would be the limit.
Obviously I put in 4 16 MB SIMMS to get the RAM to 64 MB. Definite
downside to this is that 72-pin SIMMS are
a) getting harder to find and
b) becoming quite a bit more expensive than their 168-pin DIMM counterparts.
HTH,
Paul A. Shippert Library/Media Specialist
Margaret Brent Middle School
Phone: 301-884-4635 FAX: 301-884-8937
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