Ebay is a good place to purchase new sticks of PC2 4200 RAM. One can purchase sticks from almost any location in the world. One can also purchase these sticks from Best Buy and most computer hardware shops.
Depending on what size RAM required from Amazon will determine the price given. PC2 4200 DDR2 commonly ranged from 512MB to 2GB sticks and will vary from as little as £5 up to £40 for certain brands.
Maximum 2gb can be installed. that is 1gb x 2 ModulesSupported ram is DDR2 pc2-4200 Ram
No the emachines t3612 supports pc2 4200 and pc2 5300 240 pin you can check the link also http://crucial.com/store/listparts.aspx?model=T3612
DDR2 PC2-6400 RAM can be purchased online through several retailers. Retailers such as Newegg, TigerDirect, Amazon, and even local stores such as Best Buy offer legacy RAM for purchase online.
Buy New Ram Cards cards. Each memory slot (2 total) on the inspiron 6000 can hold DDR2 PC2-5300, DDR2 PC2-4200 with a maximum of 1GB per slot.
The PC2-3200 memory has a RAM Memory of 400. It can transfer at a maxumum of 3,200 MB per second. The PC2 3200 is also called DDR2-400 RAM. http://www.ehow.com/facts_7423881_there-style-ddr2-so_dimm-memory_.html#ixzz1PI8ftNWF
The Acer Aspire 3620 Notebook computer can use DDR2 PC2-4200 (DDR2-533) or DDR2 PC2-5300 (DDR2-667) which are 200-pin SODIMM modules. The Acer Aspire 3620 has two memory slots and each slot supports up to 1 Gigabyte of RAM for a total of 2 Gigabytes. This system uses unbuffered, Non-ECC, 1.8 Volt RAM.
Memory Type: DDR2 PC2-6400, DDR2 PC2-8500, DDR2 (non-ECC)Maximum Memory: 8GBSlots: 4Each memory slot can hold DDR2 PC2-6400, DDR2 PC2-8500 with a maximum of 2GB per slot.
It's best to use the same type of RAM that you install, for two slots, use the same speed, memory size, and other supplementary attributes that your RAM has. Even RAM made from the same manufacturer is recommended. The PC2 tells you that it's DDR2 memory, so that's a place to start.
Is your question incomplete? The pc2 5300 is simply the speed of the ddr2 sdram memory... Dual Data Rate is what DDR stands for The 5300 is the transfer speed. Be careful when selecting clock speeds because many manufacturers will test memory to 800 Mhz and list it at 800 Mhz but it will be factory set at 667Mhz such as the Kingston PC2 6400 1GB module which is really a pc2 5300 that can be overclocked to 800 Mhz You need to match the FSB speed of your system to the memory you select. You wouldn't want to run pc2 4200 with a system that has 1033 Mhz FSB nor would you put pc2 8500 in a system with a 400 Mhz FSB. One will work but slow you down and the other might work or might not but would be a waste of money to buy fast ram for a slow system. I am running Dual Pentium 4 3.0 Ghz processors with 800 Mhz FSB and I selected 4 modules of ram that are 1 GB each running pc2 6400 which is 800 Mhz Ram (400 Mhz IN and 400 Mhz OUT ) This is also why most systems report ram as 400 Mhz when it is really 800Mhz. It is 400 Mhz Doubled. My system is not overclocked and runs very quiet, cool, and stable
No, brand does not matter. You must make sure that the memory is of the same type though. When picking out RAM, look at the sticks that are already in your computer. There should be a paper label on one side that tells the type, size and speed. Look for something like PC2-6400 or PC3-12800 etc. This tells you the type and speed of the memory. If it's PC2, you need DDR2 RAM of the same speed. PC3 means you need DDR3 RAM. The whole set, such as PC2-6400 is the speed. Be careful when inspecting your RAM or you can damage it. Only hold it by the edges. Unplug the computer and touch a metal part of your computer case before you take out the RAM. Note that if you have a 32-bit OS like Windows XP, then adding more than 4GB or RAM is futile. 64-bit systems like Vista-64 or Windows 7 can have far more RAM than your computer can hold.
Although it would probably be possible, depending on the chipset used, it would offer poorer performance.