Stop Microsoft
Operating Systems => macOS => Topic started by: Paladin9 on 9 February 2004, 02:39
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I happen to have an extra stick of 256DDR 3200. I have the cheaper version of the G5(single 1.6GHz) that uses DDR 2700. Would the stick of 3200 work in the mac, and just run at 2700? or would it just not work at all?
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quote:
Originally posted by Paladin9:
I happen to have an extra stick of 256DDR 3200. I have the cheaper version of the G5(single 1.6GHz) that uses DDR 2700. Would the stick of 3200 work in the mac, and just run at 2700? or would it just not work at all?
RAM goes backward. That is, if your slot is at 2700 it can run 2700 and lower. So, no.
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I remember the good 'ol days of a year and a half ago when SDRAM was around and you could do that. got some PC133? stick it in your PC66 or PC100 system.
oh, and the names meant something back then. that RAM is not on a 3200MHz bus. glad they marginalized something else, turning it into JAMP... Just Another Marketing Ploy
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quote:
Originally posted by psyjax: plain 'ol psyjax:
RAM goes backward. That is, if your slot is at 2700 it can run 2700 and lower. So, no.
I don't know about a mac, but on a PC the answer is certainly yes. The mobo will run it as fast as it can.
RAM ratings are like CPU ratings, its a maximum speed, they don't have to run at that speed.
[ February 09, 2004: Message edited by: Tux ]
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actually, does my mac mobo only support 2700? Are the mb's in the different g5's actually different? On mine, there are only four ram slots but you can see the pin holes where the other four slots go, I just do not have them.
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Actually the answer in no. I just tried it and the G5 simply did not reconize it. This is similar to when I tried adding PC100 to an old 300MHz dell that only used PC66. It would not recognize PC100 or PC133. I do know for a fact, though, that you could use PC66 in a PC100 machine(my old imac in my case).