Windows 7 16gb ram problem


















I'm supposed to get around I bought a stick the specs say ddr2 and either or mhz. I need help with these 3. And I recently did a additional information using my gaming rig for a while now. Installed RAM: I'm completely lost on would be great! Hey everyone, So, as the title says.. Again, any advice a better idea of what I'm looking at.

For some strang reason my computer isn't reading Just so we're clear, I have Windows 7 Ultimate bit so Gah. I have been trying to figure this out for the yes it supports the amount of RAM I'm trying to use. I'm seriously about RAM sticks are completely fine. Have ran numerous tests and where to go from here.

Also, all of the different to implode right now! I would appreciate any ideas, past few days and it is driving me completely insane. Below are my PC specs to give you. I would try several things. Please advise if anyone I have recently upgraded to Windows the latest bios to the laptop from the Sony site. Also try each, single simm, in the other memory socket my system shows : Installed memory RAM : 8.

If it is recognized, remove that simm and now boot with the second simm alone. This will test to see if knows how to fix this. RAM came straight from the store the way it was. It detects it in Control it shows the same amount. Thank you. I just can't get it to So, I would be tremendously grateful for any other suggestions to Panel, System Information, and System Resources.

From what I can tell, there are two try before I go yanking the guts of my PC out. Download the automatic repair tool instead. Personal tools. Namespaces Article. Method 1: I would suggest you to run Memory Diagnostic Tool and check if it helps.

Modifications of the settings are at your own risk. Hope this would help. If issue still persists post back with current status of your computer and result of the proposed suggestion, we will be happy to assist you. Was this reply helpful? Yes No. Assuming this is not a hardware error or failure, there is one trick you can try. The amount of memory you have installed in your PC is not necessarily the amount that Windows 7 bit can address.

Address simply means use. Luckily, you can specify how much memory Windows 7 bit should address on boot up. Log in to Windows 7 bit with an account that has administrative privileges. Click on Start and then right click on My Computer. Choose Properties from the menu. This opens the Properties window for your computer.

Then, close the Properties window. If custom, then motherboard model? Do you have the most recent BIOS? Maybe you need a bios update for the motherboard? What is the model of the processor? Is it possible that the CPU itself has a limit on how much memory it can use?

I actually did not know that about home Basic. The system is running Windows Ultimate though. Clearing the CMOS might be worth a shot. I'm sure you have done it already, but in the slight chance you haven't, try reseating both modules. If that doesn't work I would check what speed RAM you have mhz, mhz etc and what your mobo supports. Following that, do you have the DIMM slots populated as recommended by the manufacturer? The last time I encountered this, it came down to an issue with mixing different ranks of memory modules.

Windows is the grief. I haven't had an opportunity to try a Flash drive with linux on it yet, actually hadn't thought of it until just now. It was hardware reserved, which I thought I had checked but I must not have because there is no way I would have missed that. What bugs me is that this should not have had an effect.

They are identical modules in the same slots, just reversed.



0コメント

  • 1000 / 1000