All transistor devices have what is known as "infant mortality," which
means they will probably fail early in life if there is a defect, but
then last a long time with clean power.
Often if you have more than one stick of memory (they frequently come in
fours), then you can remove one at a time and find the faulty one
through trial and error.
Dean Kukral
On 10/1/2016 11:44 AM, ceares wrote:
> Thanks, after multiple frustrated attempts I finally did remove it and the computer is working fine now. While I can install memory(or thought I could) I'm not really that familiar with it. Does this happen-working okay and then failing or does it usually fail right away if it is going to. I'm going to return the memory but I don't know if I should try exchanging it or just get a refund if for some reason the computer is just rejecting new memory.
>
> thanks again for the quick response
>
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