- Apr 28, 2001
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Originally posted by: kimchee411
NOTE: You may need to manually adjust the voltage in your BIOS. My mobo tried to run it at 1.85 V out of the box and some others have reported the same.
Originally posted by: jjmIII
Originally posted by: kimchee411
NOTE: You may need to manually adjust the voltage in your BIOS. My mobo tried to run it at 1.85 V out of the box and some others have reported the same.
Sometimes this requires seperate sticks to even get into the bios and make the change.
Originally posted by: kimchee411
Originally posted by: jjmIII
Originally posted by: kimchee411
NOTE: You may need to manually adjust the voltage in your BIOS. My mobo tried to run it at 1.85 V out of the box and some others have reported the same.
Sometimes this requires seperate sticks to even get into the bios and make the change.
I don't quite understand. If you're saying you need to install in pairs of DIMMs then yeah, that's true because they are dual channel.
Originally posted by: kimchee411
Originally posted by: jjmIII
Originally posted by: kimchee411
NOTE: You may need to manually adjust the voltage in your BIOS. My mobo tried to run it at 1.85 V out of the box and some others have reported the same.
Sometimes this requires seperate sticks to even get into the bios and make the change.
I don't quite understand. If you're saying you need to install in pairs of DIMMs then yeah, that's true because they are dual channel.
Originally posted by: Kwint Sommer
Originally posted by: kimchee411
Originally posted by: jjmIII
Originally posted by: kimchee411
NOTE: You may need to manually adjust the voltage in your BIOS. My mobo tried to run it at 1.85 V out of the box and some others have reported the same.
Sometimes this requires seperate sticks to even get into the bios and make the change.
I don't quite understand. If you're saying you need to install in pairs of DIMMs then yeah, that's true because they are dual channel.
Because of the higher voltage requirements, your computer may not work with them straight out of the box. You may have to acquire a separate stick of ram, boot off of that and adjust the settings before these will work.
Originally posted by: Kwint Sommer
Originally posted by: kimchee411
Originally posted by: jjmIII
Originally posted by: kimchee411
NOTE: You may need to manually adjust the voltage in your BIOS. My mobo tried to run it at 1.85 V out of the box and some others have reported the same.
Sometimes this requires seperate sticks to even get into the bios and make the change.
I don't quite understand. If you're saying you need to install in pairs of DIMMs then yeah, that's true because they are dual channel.
Because of the higher voltage requirements, your computer may not work with them straight out of the box. You may have to acquire a separate stick of ram, boot off of that and adjust the settings before these will work.
Originally posted by: arcenite
Originally posted by: kimchee411
Originally posted by: jjmIII
Originally posted by: kimchee411
NOTE: You may need to manually adjust the voltage in your BIOS. My mobo tried to run it at 1.85 V out of the box and some others have reported the same.
Sometimes this requires seperate sticks to even get into the bios and make the change.
I don't quite understand. If you're saying you need to install in pairs of DIMMs then yeah, that's true because they are dual channel.
A single stick will work just fine.
Originally posted by: kimchee411
Originally posted by: arcenite
Originally posted by: kimchee411
Originally posted by: jjmIII
Originally posted by: kimchee411
NOTE: You may need to manually adjust the voltage in your BIOS. My mobo tried to run it at 1.85 V out of the box and some others have reported the same.
Sometimes this requires seperate sticks to even get into the bios and make the change.
I don't quite understand. If you're saying you need to install in pairs of DIMMs then yeah, that's true because they are dual channel.
A single stick will work just fine.
No. Dual channel memory needs to be installed in pairs.
Originally posted by: Stoneburner
Originally posted by: kimchee411
Originally posted by: arcenite
Originally posted by: kimchee411
Originally posted by: jjmIII
Originally posted by: kimchee411
NOTE: You may need to manually adjust the voltage in your BIOS. My mobo tried to run it at 1.85 V out of the box and some others have reported the same.
Sometimes this requires seperate sticks to even get into the bios and make the change.
I don't quite understand. If you're saying you need to install in pairs of DIMMs then yeah, that's true because they are dual channel.
A single stick will work just fine.
No. Dual channel memory needs to be installed in pairs.
I thought it just runs in single channel mode if there's 1 stick.
Originally posted by: kimchee411
Originally posted by: Kwint Sommer
Originally posted by: kimchee411
Originally posted by: jjmIII
Originally posted by: kimchee411
NOTE: You may need to manually adjust the voltage in your BIOS. My mobo tried to run it at 1.85 V out of the box and some others have reported the same.
Sometimes this requires seperate sticks to even get into the bios and make the change.
I don't quite understand. If you're saying you need to install in pairs of DIMMs then yeah, that's true because they are dual channel.
Because of the higher voltage requirements, your computer may not work with them straight out of the box. You may have to acquire a separate stick of ram, boot off of that and adjust the settings before these will work.
Have you seen this happen? Usually under-volted RAM will run, but will result in instability.
Originally posted by: Phew
I have this RAM, and for some reason it won't do the stock timings at stock speeds, even with only 1 stick installed in my UD3P. It will run really fast FSB, but if I set the timings faster than 5-7-7-20, I can't even POST. Not a big deal, because timings aren't very important in real-world apps, but be warned if you are running this Gigabyte board. And I'm running at 2.1V with dedicated RAM fans.
It must be a limitation of the board, because on my old ASUS P5Q, it would do better than the stock timings at most FSB settings. Then again, the ASUS would crap out at 420 MHz FSB with a quad-core. All mobos have their limitations
Originally posted by: Bozo Galora
i4memory.com (forums) has bios templates for all the popular mobo that tell you what to set and expect for various FSB speeds
He IS the memory man (eva2000 - George from down under)
Originally posted by: WT
^^ Nice price !! I want to pair up the OCZ Reapers I have with a matching set but I cannot seem to find mine available anywhere. Failing that, I still want to buy more RAM while the price is relatively low, and this OCZ stuff is quality stuff and fits the bill. Thanks for the link, arkcom !