PC-3200
PC1600(200MHz), PC2100(266MHz), PC2700(333MHz), PC3200(400MHz),PC4000(500MHz), PC4200(533MHz), PC5300(667MHz), PC6400(800MHz) Per pg 230 of the A+ Guide to Hardware PC1600(200MHz), PC2100(266MHz), PC2700(333MHz), PC3200(400MHz),PC4000(500MHz), PC4200(533MHz), PC5300(667MHz), PC6400(800MHz) Per pg 230 of the A+ Guide to Hardware
If you need 400 MHz DIMMs, you should pick PC3200. PC4000 RAM has a frequency of 250 MHz, translating to 500 MHz (due to the double data rate factor) and not 400 MHz
I would buy two PC3200 DIMMs because they run at 400Mhz. PC4000 on the other hand runs at 500Mhz.
You purchase pc3200.
Anytime you are dealing with a PC### you will divide the number 8 to get the MHz.
PC = DDR
PC2 = DDR2
PC3 = DDR3
pc3200. Just use the bit vs. byte ratio and divide the pc#### by 8 to get the Mhz:
3200/8= 400Mhz
PC 3200 is DDR 400 MHz
PC3200
PC-3200
0.4 GHz
400,000 cycles a second.
usuali is 200mhz but i gues its 400mhz becase its saing double or somthing....
PC3200
134Mhz
pcv1132
There should be a button that lets you do this very easily. There is on a Brukker 400MHz NMR.
It's limited by your motherboard on what CPU it can take. The list of supported processors is most likely listed in the manual.
400MHZ DDR PC3200 ------ 184 pin Dimm
It does not "see it", it simply displays the frequency it is running at!Try changing the multiplier or FSB frequency in BIOS to make it run at 500MHz.Some BIOSes on old boards were poorly written and "forgot" to raise the FSB.
Processor Type is not important when selecting memory. It's the FSB (Front Side Bus) speed that's important... FSB400 PC3200 FSB333 PC2700 FSB266 PC2100 If you have a processor with a 400MHz FSB, then you need a Motherboard which supports a 400MHz FSB. You then select the appropriate memory.
Search the manufacturer website and search the card model number, they will have the specs on line. 400MHz