RE: [OT] detecting the RAM speed

2001-07-12 Thread Ian Perry
sions. Ian -Original Message- From: 'Martin F. Krafft' [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Thursday, July 12, 2001 10:32 PM To: Ian Perry Cc: debian users Subject: Re: [OT] detecting the RAM speed also sprach Ian Perry (on Tue, 10 Jul 2001 12:05:55PM +1000): > The RAM chips shoul

Re: [OT] detecting the RAM speed

2001-07-12 Thread 'Martin F. Krafft'
also sprach Ian Perry (on Tue, 10 Jul 2001 12:05:55PM +1000): > The RAM chips should be marked with a suffix -07 for 133MHz > eg KINGMAX KSV884T4A1A-07 they are marked Kowa A-6263 Q1 -7 where the "-7" is slightly superscripted. am i to assume that the chips are therefore 133MHz? can anyone o

Re: [users] Re: [OT] detecting the RAM speed

2001-07-09 Thread Martin F. Krafft
also sprach Brian Nelson (on Sun, 08 Jul 2001 09:27:54AM -0400): > Well, I guess one way you could tell would be from the memory chips' > latency. For 133MHz, it would have to be lower than 7.5ns (inverse of > 133MHz) to be able to run. Can memtest86 detect the latency? Or > maybe the latency is

Re: [OT] detecting the RAM speed

2001-07-08 Thread Brian Nelson
On Sun, Jul 08, 2001 at 02:04:18PM +0200, Martin F. Krafft wrote: > hi guys, > a guy on ebay is trying to cheat. i got a 256Mb/133 SDRAM module from > him, which wwas defective (according to memtest86). so i sent it back, > and received a replacement. this replacement was not detected by my > machi

[OT] detecting the RAM speed

2001-07-08 Thread Martin F. Krafft
hi guys, a guy on ebay is trying to cheat. i got a 256Mb/133 SDRAM module from him, which wwas defective (according to memtest86). so i sent it back, and received a replacement. this replacement was not detected by my machine until i changed the bus speed for the RAM slots to 100Mhz (it was at 133M