On 27 Jan 2004 20:05:59 -0800,
(E-Mail Removed) (TAB) wrote:
>Hi, I am contemplating the purchase of a used system for a very cheap
>price (around 130$) made by Gateway. It is a P4 1.3 GHZ machine with
>128 megs of RDRAM.
>
>I was concerned about the RDDRAM. The specs say it uses an 800mhz
>RDDRAM chip. I understand these have to be installed in pairs.
This is true.
> So if I
>wanted 256megs, that means I must buy two 128 meg chips
You could upgrade the system by buying 2x64MB RIMMs. Presumably the
current system already has 2x64MB in there and almost all RDRAM P4
systems have 4 RIMM sockets (note: I have no idea about the specifics
of this Gateway system, it could be the exception to the above rule,
though I would doubt it).
>, which seem to
>be quite overpriced, and crucial didnt' seem to carry them.
Crucial is Micron's retail front-end. Micron and Rambus have been in
a rather lengthy court battle for the past few years. I don't expect
that Crucial will ever carry any RDRAM!
>Looking on another site I find information about a CRIMM. If I
>understand correctly, you can use a CRIMM in one slot, and a Ram chip
>in another.
You MUST put CRIMMs in any slots that are not being used. The current
system most likely has 2x64MB in two of the sockets and 2 CRIMMs in
the other two sockets.
>This is what I want to know - can you get (1) RDRAM 256 chip and
>(1)CRIMM and that be all - and this work?
Nope, no can do. You need matched modules in each of the two
channels. If you put a 128MB module in one, you need to put a 128MB
in the other. Each channel has two sockets, and you can have
different modules in the two sockets of the same channel, but the both
sockets in one channel must match both sockets in the other channel.
So, you can have 2x128MB + 2xCRIMMs, or you can have 2x64MB + 2x64MB,
but there is no way to have just a single module on it's own.
In any case, if you go to
www.memman.com, they sell 2x128MB RDRAM kits
for $99 to $116, depending on just what type of module you need. They
also have the same sort of memory configurator that Crucial has, ie
you plug in the make and model of your system and it spits out the
memory that will work with it. Kingston's Valueram (
www.valueram.com)
also sells RDRAM for similar prices, though the smallest models they
sell are 256MB. In any case, RDRAM is more than DDR memory and the
performance isn't really any better (though back in the day when the
P4 1.3GHz came out RDRAM was a LOT better for it than the PC133 SDRAM
around then), but if the total system price works out ok then it might
not be too bad.
FWIW, If you do go for this system I would recommend that you buy all
the RDRAM you think this system is ever going to need now, because
it's almost certainly not going to get any cheaper.
-------------
Tony Hill
hilla <underscore> 20 <at> yahoo <dot> ca