It depends on the motherboard. If you can find out what type of motherboard you have, you can look up what type of memory and how much of it you can install into the memory banks. Keep in mind that the operating system that you have may limit how much of the installed memory you can actually use.
Enter the make or model of your PC or motherboard to generate a list of memory module from minimum to maximum. ind out the size the mdule that fits your system.
Maximum amount of memory that can be installed and type of connectors that will be on the motherboard
The maximum amount of RAM supported by a computer depends on the processor and the motherboard.
It support maximum of 4 GB RAM
The Intel D845GLLY motherboard supports a maximum of 2GB of PC133 SDRAM, using two 1 GB modules.
The Gigabyte GA-EP45-UD3P motherboard supports a maximum of 16 GB of RAM, using four 4 GB modules of DDR2 RAM.
It's either 4 or 8GB. The amount of supported memory depends rather on type of chipset you have.
You need to look at the motherboard and see if there are any spare memory slots. You also need to check the maximum amount of memory that the motherboard can handle.
The MSI MS-7082 supports a maximum of 2 GB of RAM, using DDR400 modules in 2 slots (1 GB per slot).
There is a limit in the number of physical slots on your motherboard and a limit of what the bios can manage. But remember, 8GB of RAM and a 1.5 GHz processor is not necessarily faster even with 16GB RAM. Having a balance of processor speed an RAM is the way to go.
The maximum amount the FDIC insures is $275,000.
Different microprocessor can address different amounts of memory. The motherboard design should allow for maximising the physical memory to what the microprocessor can address
Maximum aperture is the maximum amount you can get a hole to open.