F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Use standard DIMM slots if available, otherwise consider UDIMMs for compatibility.

Use standard DIMM slots if available, otherwise consider UDIMMs for compatibility.

Use standard DIMM slots if available, otherwise consider UDIMMs for compatibility.

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senbonzakura13
Senior Member
372
09-16-2016, 01:36 AM
#1
If you look at my signature, you see I have two Asus X79 systems doing UnRAID. You'll also see they're not really maxed out on RAM. Do have 8x8GB of DDR3 but it gives me problems, while all mostly of nearly the same type, some have slightly different PCBs and two of the sticks will not play nice with the other 6 and cause hangups, refuse to boot, crash, even at reduced clock speed. Any combination of the 8 sticks in in 4 stick kits works flawlessly, 6 of them also work fine in an 8 slot system, you add the two other to the other 6 and you have issues. Before anyone asks, no, this is an official X79 board, it does not support Registered/Buffered ECC, only Unregistered/Unbuffered ECC. (And I think the ECC function doesn't even work when using UDIMMs). I've tried it with RDIMMs. I've looked for BIOS mods. Nothing. RDIMMs will not work, only DIMMs or UDIMMs. So there is the queston, would it be cheaper to hunt down an 8x8GB DIMM or UDIMM kit? UDIMMs are not nearly as common on the used market as RDIMMs. ...Or as cheap, since the used market is flooded with RDIMMs.
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senbonzakura13
09-16-2016, 01:36 AM #1

If you look at my signature, you see I have two Asus X79 systems doing UnRAID. You'll also see they're not really maxed out on RAM. Do have 8x8GB of DDR3 but it gives me problems, while all mostly of nearly the same type, some have slightly different PCBs and two of the sticks will not play nice with the other 6 and cause hangups, refuse to boot, crash, even at reduced clock speed. Any combination of the 8 sticks in in 4 stick kits works flawlessly, 6 of them also work fine in an 8 slot system, you add the two other to the other 6 and you have issues. Before anyone asks, no, this is an official X79 board, it does not support Registered/Buffered ECC, only Unregistered/Unbuffered ECC. (And I think the ECC function doesn't even work when using UDIMMs). I've tried it with RDIMMs. I've looked for BIOS mods. Nothing. RDIMMs will not work, only DIMMs or UDIMMs. So there is the queston, would it be cheaper to hunt down an 8x8GB DIMM or UDIMM kit? UDIMMs are not nearly as common on the used market as RDIMMs. ...Or as cheap, since the used market is flooded with RDIMMs.

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Nargushk
Member
170
09-16-2016, 02:51 AM
#2
Ignore ECC unless you're replacing X79 boards with real server boards using a C-series chipset. Intel removed ECC support from the X79, making RAM modules like UDIMM and RDIMM unnecessary. You'll be restricted to 8GB DIMMs without RDIMM compatibility, which unfortunately has no solution.
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Nargushk
09-16-2016, 02:51 AM #2

Ignore ECC unless you're replacing X79 boards with real server boards using a C-series chipset. Intel removed ECC support from the X79, making RAM modules like UDIMM and RDIMM unnecessary. You'll be restricted to 8GB DIMMs without RDIMM compatibility, which unfortunately has no solution.

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Cyberlore221
Junior Member
19
09-20-2016, 10:27 PM
#3
The discussion focused on which type of memory modules—RDIMMs or UDIMMs—is more affordable on the second-hand market, excluding the extremely low-cost RDIMMs.
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Cyberlore221
09-20-2016, 10:27 PM #3

The discussion focused on which type of memory modules—RDIMMs or UDIMMs—is more affordable on the second-hand market, excluding the extremely low-cost RDIMMs.

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Hydraz
Member
64
09-20-2016, 10:56 PM
#4
Eight 8GB units are always ideal in pairs for optimal performance... using multiple identical sticks might lead to problems. A fully compatible group of eight 8GB modules could be convenient to obtain, but newer options might offer better efficiency.
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Hydraz
09-20-2016, 10:56 PM #4

Eight 8GB units are always ideal in pairs for optimal performance... using multiple identical sticks might lead to problems. A fully compatible group of eight 8GB modules could be convenient to obtain, but newer options might offer better efficiency.

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DJRingLP
Junior Member
20
09-21-2016, 12:14 AM
#5
Yup and the consumer 8 stick kits aren't typical. That's why I'm considering UDIMMs—they're common in enterprise settings and often come in large quantities, even if they're not as inexpensive as RDIMMs.
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DJRingLP
09-21-2016, 12:14 AM #5

Yup and the consumer 8 stick kits aren't typical. That's why I'm considering UDIMMs—they're common in enterprise settings and often come in large quantities, even if they're not as inexpensive as RDIMMs.

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MCkeiron
Junior Member
39
09-30-2016, 05:11 AM
#6
They’re likely more accessible because moving them is tougher.
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MCkeiron
09-30-2016, 05:11 AM #6

They’re likely more accessible because moving them is tougher.

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hampus_1
Member
72
09-30-2016, 06:59 AM
#7
ECC UDIMMs cost more than standard non-ECC versions. Only basic low-end servers used the non-ECC type. I haven't encountered them at a very affordable price.
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hampus_1
09-30-2016, 06:59 AM #7

ECC UDIMMs cost more than standard non-ECC versions. Only basic low-end servers used the non-ECC type. I haven't encountered them at a very affordable price.

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SametPunch_V5
Member
95
10-05-2016, 03:55 PM
#8
Check the PC Part Picker for these choices; it can aid your search.
Visit their memory page for more details.
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SametPunch_V5
10-05-2016, 03:55 PM #8

Check the PC Part Picker for these choices; it can aid your search.
Visit their memory page for more details.