F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Attempted to increase RAM capacity.

Attempted to increase RAM capacity.

Attempted to increase RAM capacity.

R
rux0r
Junior Member
11
03-09-2016, 11:31 PM
#1
Attempted to upgrade RAM from Corsair Vengeance 1066MHz to G.Skill F4 3600MHz. Devices powered on but no display appears. After resetting the CMOS battery, they still won’t light up or show anything. Assistance needed.
R
rux0r
03-09-2016, 11:31 PM #1

Attempted to upgrade RAM from Corsair Vengeance 1066MHz to G.Skill F4 3600MHz. Devices powered on but no display appears. After resetting the CMOS battery, they still won’t light up or show anything. Assistance needed.

R
62
03-10-2016, 12:20 AM
#2
It might be a faulty RAM module. The older model could still function if it's intact.
R
RomaxiGamerzYT
03-10-2016, 12:20 AM #2

It might be a faulty RAM module. The older model could still function if it's intact.

_
56
03-10-2016, 04:15 AM
#3
I replaced the old RAM and it stopped working too. Edit: just insert them into slots 1-3 and it functioned. Possibly misplaced them earlier. Should I attempt optimal placement or keep it as is? Edit2: The PC won’t power on in slots 2-4 but lights up when I try another slot.
_
_AtomicRabbit_
03-10-2016, 04:15 AM #3

I replaced the old RAM and it stopped working too. Edit: just insert them into slots 1-3 and it functioned. Possibly misplaced them earlier. Should I attempt optimal placement or keep it as is? Edit2: The PC won’t power on in slots 2-4 but lights up when I try another slot.

D
DeathKing_
Junior Member
7
03-10-2016, 08:43 AM
#4
Your system specifications are quite advanced. It seems you're considering a significant upgrade—1066 DDR3 or possibly DDR4 2133? A BIOS update might be necessary for running at 3600 MHz, though an older chip could struggle with memory controllers. A 3200 MHz would have been a safer choice, but let's confirm what you can actually support.
D
DeathKing_
03-10-2016, 08:43 AM #4

Your system specifications are quite advanced. It seems you're considering a significant upgrade—1066 DDR3 or possibly DDR4 2133? A BIOS update might be necessary for running at 3600 MHz, though an older chip could struggle with memory controllers. A 3200 MHz would have been a safer choice, but let's confirm what you can actually support.

T
TheMemedusa
Member
137
03-10-2016, 04:25 PM
#5
I have an ASRock B550M steel legend A5800X3D with a 3070 MHz RAM. I placed the RAM in slots 1-3 instead of 2-4, and it booted initially but fails when I switch back to slots 2-4. Is there anything I should adjust in the BIOS?
T
TheMemedusa
03-10-2016, 04:25 PM #5

I have an ASRock B550M steel legend A5800X3D with a 3070 MHz RAM. I placed the RAM in slots 1-3 instead of 2-4, and it booted initially but fails when I switch back to slots 2-4. Is there anything I should adjust in the BIOS?

S
SuperPieGames
Member
160
03-26-2016, 11:01 AM
#6
switch the new sticks just like your old rams would, making sure they hit at least 3200 even if it's a low-quality part like the Hynix 8Gbit model. Better yet, Icons will be able to find the best options online once you know the IC with the thaiphoon burner.
S
SuperPieGames
03-26-2016, 11:01 AM #6

switch the new sticks just like your old rams would, making sure they hit at least 3200 even if it's a low-quality part like the Hynix 8Gbit model. Better yet, Icons will be able to find the best options online once you know the IC with the thaiphoon burner.

C
CJP8602
Member
55
03-27-2016, 03:05 PM
#7
Combined threads ready for review.
C
CJP8602
03-27-2016, 03:05 PM #7

Combined threads ready for review.