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So I am kind of in a pickle, i'm extremely new to hardware upgrading and I came upon a issue.

My computer currently has 2x2GB sticks of: Elpida PC3-10600 ram (https://www.amazon.com/Elpida-PC3-10600-1333mhz-NON-ECC-EBJ21UE8BDF0-DJ-F/dp/B0125BC7SE)

I would like to upgrade to 8 GB, so I purchased two of these: ValueSelect 2GB DDR3 1333MHz CL9 RAM Stick, however after I inserted the sticks into my motherboard it refused to boot, I have verified my ram slots are working so I assume the memory is incompatible with my chipset.

I decided to use Crucials System Scan tool and it recommends me to use: Crucial 2GB DDR3-1600 UDIMM (http://www.crucial.com/usa/en/thinkcentre-m58p-(type--7347,-7357,-7358,-7483,-7484,-7630,-7635,-9964-and-9965)/CT5509224)

However this doesn't make any sense to me, why is Crucial Recommending me DDR3 PC3-12800 while I currently have PC3-10600 installed? Will this even work in my system and why?

Journeyman Geek
  • 133,878

3 Answers3

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First off mixing ram can potentially damage your computer (especially different speed and brand) so don't try it if you can avoid it. Although I have mixed ram myself and personally did not have any problems.

1) You need to make sure that your motherboard first supports the ram you are using

2) Make sure you are putting the ram in the correct slots, sounds to me you have 2 dual channel sets, make sure you put each set in the respective dual channel slots (usually colour coded).

3) Check BIOS if the motherboard is even detecting the ram

Crucial is probably assuming you're buying completely new set of ram so recommending a different speed.

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They will work with the slower memory speed but you can use them.

hulaq
  • 27
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It could work, but if you want to be really sure, and assure stability, you should use sticks with identical speeds