David Y 0 Posted September 25, 2001 I just bought 512MB ram to replace my single chip 256MB. Couldn't believe it gave me a blue screen. Do I have to format just for ram? If so that's ridiculus Share this post Link to post
DosFreak 2 Posted September 25, 2001 No. It doesn't that RAM may be bad. Remember to put it in the 1st slot and test your memory! Also play around with the memory settings. Share this post Link to post
David Y 0 Posted September 25, 2001 The ram isn't bad cause I just went back to the shop to test it. Is there any settings I must set in order to install the ram without getting the blue screen on boot? Share this post Link to post
Sandaasu 0 Posted September 25, 2001 If you're suddenly getting a blue screen on boot, the memory si probably bad. Try testing it yourself. There are no settings that have to be changed to upgrade RAM. Share this post Link to post
BladeRunner 0 Posted September 25, 2001 Some motherboards just have so many problems with 512MB memory modules. SUre the manual says it will be fine and of course the person selling you the module will tell you all will be fine, but I've seen more systems fail to see the 512MB module than actually work without a problem. Blue screen is a major hardware fault - Take your PC in to the people who sold you the module and show them, maybe they will have some ideas. Share this post Link to post
FatFish 0 Posted September 25, 2001 in your bios, try to set your clock rate down or use less agressive seting 3-3-3 instead of 2-2-2.. see if you still get a BSOD. and sometimes when it said its PC-133 RAM, it sometimes can't run at 133, specially those with generic brand name. Share this post Link to post
Vampyr 0 Posted September 25, 2001 What type of BSOD is it giving you? If its an OE error then its memory. One thing i noticed is that problematic ram acts up worse on 2k/XP machines than on 9x/ME machines. Share this post Link to post
David Y 0 Posted September 26, 2001 Quote: in your bios, try to set your clock rate down or use less agressive seting 3-3-3 instead of 2-2-2.. see if you still get a BSOD. and sometimes when it said its PC-133 RAM, it sometimes can't run at 133, specially those with generic brand name. Thanks that fixed it. It was CAS 3 instead of 2 but I got it exchanged to 2 again Share this post Link to post