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On 9 Dec 98 at 20:43, Paul Wittry wrote:
> Funniest thing, I sit here looking at four 4Mx9, supposedly 30pin
> SIMMs(I didn't look too close at the time), that I purchased used
> from a dealer of used equipment here in Seattle. These are not
> 30pin SIMMS, but more in line with what you describe. They're about
> the same size as 30's but have the split, and 32pins to each
> segment. Which makes them 64pin SIMMs. Are you sure that the
> sockets you have in that board aren't 32pins to a side? If they are
> 36pins to a side then they are 72pin.
Three possibilities spring to mind:
1. These are 72-pin SIMMs, but non-parity and so the manufacturer
hasn't bothered to provide contacts for the unused pins. Doesn't
seem very likely, but it's a possibility.
2. This is somebody's proprietary SIMM-like memory arrangement.
Proprietary memory arrangements are particularly common in laptops,
although I've also seen them in some IBM models....
3. This might be something like a COAST cache module, which uses
static RAM rather than dynamic -- but I don't think those were ever
made larger than 512K, and they go into a slot that's a bit different
from a SIMM socket.
David G
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