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Amazon | $59.99 |
Product Name: | TEAMGROUP T-Force Vulcan Z DDR4 32GB Kit (2x16GB) 3600MHz (PC4-28800) CL18 Desktop Memory Module Ram TLZBD432G3600HC18JDC01 Black |
Manufacturer: | TEAMGROUP |
Model Number: | TLZBD432G3600HC18JDC01 |
Product SKU: | B0B3QPM4SJ |
UPC: | 765441661615 |
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If not, it will tell how many sticks are installed. Reference that number to the manual.
top left there is a drop down that will list ALL memory slots existing on your motherboard; select each one of them and if slot it is populated then info will come up, if available then the rest of the information will be blank.
Awesome times to build or upgrade PCs!! Just wish GPU prices would fall a little bit faster
The stock ram is plent fast (2900) but I added fast 3000mhz Corsair ram and that apparently is only fast if you adjust the bios. (It sunk the whole ram to 2133mhz)
Do I need stock Samsung/Hynix ram only or is there some enthusiast brand that I can use? That just shows up properly in the bios. Dell doesn't set ram timings manually.
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top left there is a drop down that will list ALL memory slots existing on your motherboard; select each one of them and if slot it is populated then info will come up, if available then the rest of the information will be blank.
I thought I was going to jump on the AM5/DDR5 train but some home plumbing repairs have set that project back a good while
Usually OEM machines run RAM at a set speed determined by the motherboard. There's very little (usually nothing) that can be done in BIOS to change it. 3200 is considered an "Overclock" by JDEC standards, in fact, I think anything over 2666 is considered an OC with DDR4.
So, download your desired system info utility now. (CPU-Z will suffice) and see what speed it's currently running. In the RAM/memory section, it should either say the frequency is around 1600MHz (for 3200 DDR4)
Then install the new RAM, get it working, then do the same thing, and make sure you are getting that 1600-ish MHz. if it says 1333 or lower, it reverted to JDEC standards, and your RAM likely won't work at the OEM specs for whatever reason. It would be worth double checking in the BIOS to make sure there isn't a a setting to force it though.
Hope that helps.
Will order a 3200 Mhz RAM then because 3600 Mhz will likely not work at full speed. If the original one inside the box is 3200, I can assume any 3200 will work by default?
The stock ram is plent fast (2900) but I added fast 3000mhz Corsair ram and that apparently is only fast if you adjust the bios. (It sunk the whole ram to 2133mhz)
Do I need stock Samsung/Hynix ram only or is there some enthusiast brand that I can use? That just shows up properly in the bios. Dell doesn't set ram timings manually.
You also want to make sure that it's in the correct RAM slots on the motherboard (assuming there are more than two slots).
Will order a 3200 Mhz RAM then because 3600 Mhz will likely not work at full speed. If the original one inside the box is 3200, I can assume any 3200 will work by default?
With my HP computer, the 3200 speed was dropped to 2666 or 2133 depending on the brand of the memory. I ended up using silicon power memory.
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The stock ram is plent fast (2900) but I added fast 3000mhz Corsair ram and that apparently is only fast if you adjust the bios. (It sunk the whole ram to 2133mhz)
Do I need stock Samsung/Hynix ram only or is there some enthusiast brand that I can use? That just shows up properly in the bios. Dell doesn't set ram timings manually.
My HP computer will only recognize new memory at 2666 or 2133 depending on the brand of memory. My neighbor tried several brands and that's the best we could get. I ended up with silicon power brand memory.