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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
Computer whizzes please enter - need help with graphics car installation
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<blockquote data-quote="Ford&gt;Chevy" data-source="post: 15880505" data-attributes="member: 166567"><p>RAM is usually designed to run in dual channel (DDR, DDR2, DDR3, DDR4 and most chipsets), triple channel (DDR3, X58 chipset only), or quad channel (DDR4, X99 Chipset or Ryzen). If I were you OP, I would remove the two 1GB RAM sticks and keep the 2 4GB RAM sticks in and then test. If that doesn't work, then reverse. Pull the 4GB sticks and reinstall the 1GB sticks. The manual usually specifies which RAM slots need to be occupied for a successful system POST test so I would look into that to make sure they are installed in the correct slots. One more note, if the motherboard has 2 or more X16 slots, are you making sure to install the graphics card in the slot nearest the CPU Cooler? The computer will not POST properly otherwise.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Ford>Chevy, post: 15880505, member: 166567"] RAM is usually designed to run in dual channel (DDR, DDR2, DDR3, DDR4 and most chipsets), triple channel (DDR3, X58 chipset only), or quad channel (DDR4, X99 Chipset or Ryzen). If I were you OP, I would remove the two 1GB RAM sticks and keep the 2 4GB RAM sticks in and then test. If that doesn't work, then reverse. Pull the 4GB sticks and reinstall the 1GB sticks. The manual usually specifies which RAM slots need to be occupied for a successful system POST test so I would look into that to make sure they are installed in the correct slots. One more note, if the motherboard has 2 or more X16 slots, are you making sure to install the graphics card in the slot nearest the CPU Cooler? The computer will not POST properly otherwise. [/QUOTE]
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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
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Computer whizzes please enter - need help with graphics car installation
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