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                        Posted by Myrk- on 
    Sat Dec 10th 2005 at 9:26pm
                     
                    
                 
                
            
            
                
    
                    
                             Myrk-
                            Myrk-
            
                        member
     
            2299 posts
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        Registered: 
    Feb 12th 2002
                    Occupation: CAD & Graphics Technician
                            Location: Plymouth, UK
             
                
                        I'd personally say check the motherboard manual, and when you buy your ram make sure its all the same size, voltage etc.
                                            
                        -[Better to be Honest than Kind]-
                                    
             
        
            
            
                                     
                                
                    
                        Re: RAMbling on.
                        Posted by Crono on 
    Sun Dec 11th 2005 at 5:11am
                     
                    
                 
                
            
            
                
    
                    
                             Crono
                            Crono
            
                        super admin
     
            6628 posts
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    Dec 19th 2003
                            Location: Oregon, USA
             
                
                        I had a reply earlier but my computer crapped out when I was typing it :sad:
Anyway, UD, get the cheapest one you find at Price Watch (check places like newegg too to see if you can find cheaper ram), There was one that had a lifetime warranty (requirement #1, if it doesn't have that, don't buy it), it was one 1GB stick, PC3200, 3.3V, $51 (pretty cheap as far as I've seen), it was made by Micron too.
3.3V is the standard for DDR SDRAM. Also, on that site, if you noticed, the ram modules that had lower voltages (or higher) specified chipsets they work with.
3.3V is standard, still check your chipset (in your motherboard manual) for it's requirements, as it will flat out tell you what voltage the slots support.
You can check what chipset you have a few ways without the manual through. An easy way is using a program like everest. But if you remember your board, you can look it up. Get a digital manual too.
I should point out though, if the ram requires lower voltage ... it will probably just use less power and deliver the same performance. The voltage on all slots in your computer are maximum numbers.
                                            
                        Blame it on Microsoft, God does.