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06-07-2019 08:33 AM - edited 06-07-2019 08:47 AM
This is a refurbished unit but i dont think that should matter. Currently has 8 gigs of DDR3-1866 PC3L-14900S SODIMM. When i purchased another 8 gig stick of this to place in the #2 slot the computer turns on but wont boot. Any ideas on what is happening? The only thing i find is that the 14900 is the wrong ram for this computer and it i should be using 12800 from what i have seen. Is this true?
I did update the bios to the latest version when i had the boot issue but i havent tried to install the ram again. The bios didnt list any memory compatibility so i doubt thats the issue. Ill try the stick again tonight and see if that made any difference.
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06-07-2019 09:56 AM
That is the wrong memory. Specified RAM is DDR3L-1600 or PC3L-12800 (different words describing same thing).
Still, DDR3L-1866/PC3L-14900 should downclock and work. Your refurbisher obviously only had the 1866 on hand and used it, knowing it would downclock. The memory will never run at 1866 speed.
You want to try each stick separately in each slot to rule out a bad memory slot and examine the original module and the new one for density (how many black blocks on the side) and check the online specifications for latency (CL=?). It is harder to get two non-standard modules to work together than it is to get just one of them to work, particularly if they are different density and/or latency.
06-07-2019 09:56 AM
That is the wrong memory. Specified RAM is DDR3L-1600 or PC3L-12800 (different words describing same thing).
Still, DDR3L-1866/PC3L-14900 should downclock and work. Your refurbisher obviously only had the 1866 on hand and used it, knowing it would downclock. The memory will never run at 1866 speed.
You want to try each stick separately in each slot to rule out a bad memory slot and examine the original module and the new one for density (how many black blocks on the side) and check the online specifications for latency (CL=?). It is harder to get two non-standard modules to work together than it is to get just one of them to work, particularly if they are different density and/or latency.