F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Determining whether to upgrade to ECC memory depends on your needs and system requirements.

Determining whether to upgrade to ECC memory depends on your needs and system requirements.

Determining whether to upgrade to ECC memory depends on your needs and system requirements.

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Ralou5EBao
Junior Member
3
11-06-2023, 01:35 AM
#1
Hello! Your notebook is your primary tool for everyday tasks, and you're thinking about boosting its performance by increasing RAM from 8GB to 20GB. Here are your questions rephrased:

- Can I swap SODIMM RAM for an ECC version?
- Will there be any noticeable change using ECC memory?

The DMI command distinguishes between the configured memory rate and the actual speed. Both terms refer to different aspects of how your RAM operates, but they don’t always match in practice.

When choosing a new SODIMM, the DMI code shows the intended speed. For example, your current setup lists 2400 MT/s, while a higher option might be 2667 MT/s. The best choice depends on your needs—consider what you plan to run and whether ECC adds value for stability.
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Ralou5EBao
11-06-2023, 01:35 AM #1

Hello! Your notebook is your primary tool for everyday tasks, and you're thinking about boosting its performance by increasing RAM from 8GB to 20GB. Here are your questions rephrased:

- Can I swap SODIMM RAM for an ECC version?
- Will there be any noticeable change using ECC memory?

The DMI command distinguishes between the configured memory rate and the actual speed. Both terms refer to different aspects of how your RAM operates, but they don’t always match in practice.

When choosing a new SODIMM, the DMI code shows the intended speed. For example, your current setup lists 2400 MT/s, while a higher option might be 2667 MT/s. The best choice depends on your needs—consider what you plan to run and whether ECC adds value for stability.

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dt118lw
Member
198
11-06-2023, 03:19 AM
#2
It seems to be a Ryzen processor. Official ECC RAM support isn't available for the Ryzen II. In practice, it doesn't work.
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dt118lw
11-06-2023, 03:19 AM #2

It seems to be a Ryzen processor. Official ECC RAM support isn't available for the Ryzen II. In practice, it doesn't work.

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Fufuit
Member
174
11-06-2023, 07:22 AM
#3
You're stuck because the motherboard already has memory soldered, so using the best RAM won't offer much extra speed or timing advantage over what's already there. ECC might not help much even if it functions with the standard built-in memory. With only one SODIMM slot for expansion, you'll likely get 8GB in dual-channel and the remaining 12GB in single-channel, which should still work for most tasks except highly demanding ones like Pi-Bench that need ultra-low latency.
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Fufuit
11-06-2023, 07:22 AM #3

You're stuck because the motherboard already has memory soldered, so using the best RAM won't offer much extra speed or timing advantage over what's already there. ECC might not help much even if it functions with the standard built-in memory. With only one SODIMM slot for expansion, you'll likely get 8GB in dual-channel and the remaining 12GB in single-channel, which should still work for most tasks except highly demanding ones like Pi-Bench that need ultra-low latency.

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InoueAlice
Senior Member
677
11-07-2023, 06:45 PM
#4
It’s better to avoid ECC RAM for this model.
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InoueAlice
11-07-2023, 06:45 PM #4

It’s better to avoid ECC RAM for this model.

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VovelPunch
Junior Member
48
11-08-2023, 11:47 AM
#5
I won’t be doing any benchmark tests on my notebook. The new version is mostly about running virtual machines—my system has about 5 to 6 gigabytes of RAM, which isn’t sufficient for Windows virtualization or handling several VMs simultaneously.
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VovelPunch
11-08-2023, 11:47 AM #5

I won’t be doing any benchmark tests on my notebook. The new version is mostly about running virtual machines—my system has about 5 to 6 gigabytes of RAM, which isn’t sufficient for Windows virtualization or handling several VMs simultaneously.

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NinjaT25
Junior Member
2
11-10-2023, 05:45 AM
#6
Opt for non-ECC since the RAM is already soldered. Align the latency and speed of the existing RAM on your computer—it’ll just boost compatibility (shouldn’t be a problem) and prevents you from purchasing faster RAM just to let it downclock to the slowest unit, wasting money unnecessarily.
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NinjaT25
11-10-2023, 05:45 AM #6

Opt for non-ECC since the RAM is already soldered. Align the latency and speed of the existing RAM on your computer—it’ll just boost compatibility (shouldn’t be a problem) and prevents you from purchasing faster RAM just to let it downclock to the slowest unit, wasting money unnecessarily.

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KingJaydxn
Member
240
11-17-2023, 05:34 AM
#7
It doesn't work with ECC at all.
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KingJaydxn
11-17-2023, 05:34 AM #7

It doesn't work with ECC at all.

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Edward1244
Junior Member
27
11-23-2023, 11:49 AM
#8
I'm choosing a 2666 non-ECC RAM configuration.
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Edward1244
11-23-2023, 11:49 AM #8

I'm choosing a 2666 non-ECC RAM configuration.