PC Review


Reply
Thread Tools Rate Thread

Will any Pentium4 processor recognize 4G of ram, if the motherboard will populate it?

 
 
sincerequestioner@yahoo.com
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      26th Feb 2007
The reason I ask this (and I date myself) is the 'good old days' when
64M or 128M of ram was a cutting edge machine. I had a machine that
would only recognize 48M of ram.........forget the processor, etc. but
know it was a compaq.....

any help is greatly appreciated.....

 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
 
Yousuf Khan
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      26th Feb 2007
(E-Mail Removed) wrote:
> The reason I ask this (and I date myself) is the 'good old days' when
> 64M or 128M of ram was a cutting edge machine. I had a machine that
> would only recognize 48M of ram.........forget the processor, etc. but
> know it was a compaq.....


Pentium 4 actually has 36 address lines, so it should be able to access
upto 16GB of memory, not just 4GB. But that also depends on what chipset
capabilities you have. If the chipset can only address upto 30-bits of
address, then you'll only be able to access 1GB, no matter what your
processor's capabilities are.

Yousuf Khan
 
Reply With Quote
 
Alexander Grigoriev
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      27th Feb 2007
The chipset also should be able to relocate part of RAM, to free some of
32-bit space for PCI devices.

"Yousuf Khan" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
news:45e36e64$(E-Mail Removed)...
> (E-Mail Removed) wrote:
>> The reason I ask this (and I date myself) is the 'good old days' when
>> 64M or 128M of ram was a cutting edge machine. I had a machine that
>> would only recognize 48M of ram.........forget the processor, etc. but
>> know it was a compaq.....

>
> Pentium 4 actually has 36 address lines, so it should be able to access
> upto 16GB of memory, not just 4GB. But that also depends on what chipset
> capabilities you have. If the chipset can only address upto 30-bits of
> address, then you'll only be able to access 1GB, no matter what your
> processor's capabilities are.
>
> Yousuf Khan



 
Reply With Quote
 
Trent
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      27th Feb 2007
On 26 Feb 2007 14:39:13 -0800 (E-Mail Removed) wrote in Message
id: <(E-Mail Removed)>:

>The reason I ask this (and I date myself) is the 'good old days' when
>64M or 128M of ram was a cutting edge machine. I had a machine that
>would only recognize 48M of ram.........forget the processor, etc. but
>know it was a compaq.....
>
>any help is greatly appreciated.....


Maybe. See http://www.polywell.com/us/support/faq/4GB_Rev1.pdf I've seen a
number of motherboards that only "see" about 3.2GB when 4GB of memory is
installed.
 
Reply With Quote
 
Trent
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      27th Feb 2007
On Tue, 27 Feb 2007 05:57:09 -0500 Trent <(E-Mail Removed).****off> wrote in
Message id: <(E-Mail Removed)>:

>On 26 Feb 2007 14:39:13 -0800 (E-Mail Removed) wrote in Message
>id: <(E-Mail Removed)>:
>
>>The reason I ask this (and I date myself) is the 'good old days' when
>>64M or 128M of ram was a cutting edge machine. I had a machine that
>>would only recognize 48M of ram.........forget the processor, etc. but
>>know it was a compaq.....
>>
>>any help is greatly appreciated.....

>
>Maybe. See http://www.polywell.com/us/support/faq/4GB_Rev1.pdf I've seen a
>number of motherboards that only "see" about 3.2GB when 4GB of memory is
>installed.


I did a little more digging around, and unless you have a i965 or i975
based motherboard (or server chipset) chances are when you populate your
motherboard with 4GB of memory, you will only realize 3.2GB maximum. You'd
be better off getting (2) 1GB DIMMs and (2) 512MB DIMMs. So it depends on
your chipset, not the CPU.
 
Reply With Quote
 
Tony Hill
Guest
Posts: n/a
 
      28th Feb 2007
On 26 Feb 2007 14:39:13 -0800, (E-Mail Removed) wrote:

>The reason I ask this (and I date myself) is the 'good old days' when
>64M or 128M of ram was a cutting edge machine. I had a machine that
>would only recognize 48M of ram.........forget the processor, etc. but
>know it was a compaq.....
>
>any help is greatly appreciated.....


Yes it will see 4GB. Actually the P4 can handle up to 64GB of memory,
though you would likely hit a motherboard limit before that time.

What's probably a bigger worry though is your operating system. Even
if your hardware will see all 4GB of memory, if you're running a
32-bit operating system you'll be limited to somewhere around 3.2GB of
memory. The processor and motherboard chipset will recognize the full
4GB, but some of that 4GB space needs to be allocated to I/O devices
(PCI devices, hard drive controller, video card, etc.). With a 32-bit
operating system you need to get everything in 4GB, so the top ~800MB
ends up getting allocated to this I/O.

Installing a 64-bit operating system allows your OS to see and use the
full 4GB of memory. As a general rule, if you have more than 2GB or
more of memory, you should really be thinking about a 64-bit OS. Of
course, a potential problem with that is that not all P4 processors
are capable of running a 64-bit OS. It depends on the exact model of
P4 chip that you have.
--
Tony Hill
hilla <underscore> 20 <at> yahoo <dot> ca
 
Reply With Quote
 
 
 
Reply

Thread Tools
Rate This Thread
Rate This Thread:

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are Off


Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Vista Does not recognize my RAM or Processor =?Utf-8?B?Q3B0bk5lbW8=?= Windows Vista Installation 6 20th Dec 2007 04:32 PM
Swapping 2 Processor Motherboard for a New Single Processor Motherboard Don Microsoft Windows 2000 1 22nd Jul 2007 07:53 PM
Swapping 2 Processor Motherboard for a New Single Processor Motherboard Don Microsoft Windows 2000 Setup 1 22nd Jul 2007 07:53 PM
Win2000 won't recognize 2nd processor? Jacob Lane, MCP Microsoft Windows 2000 4 22nd May 2005 02:28 PM
Win2000 won't recognize 2nd processor? Jacob Lane, MCP Microsoft Windows 2000 Upgrade 4 22nd May 2005 02:28 PM


Features
 

Advertising
 

Newsgroups
 


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 10:46 AM.