Arbys Guy wrote:But, i would simply like to know with these 3 DIMM or even 2 DIMM slot boards, whats better using 3 sticks , 2, or 1? im happy with any amount under 512 but over 256MB
i have alot of ram so i should be able to do what ever you guys throw at me.
There is no simple answer for this, but there are definitely some rules of thumb that you can use.
First thing is to basically always firstly check which modules are supported and in which configurations. This is usually in the manual, though the manual may exclude some of the relevant information.
Slot 1 has several different chipsets which can follow different rules.
BX is a popular one as it's very stable and not as finnicky as a lot of the other chipsets from that era.
I'm pretty sure that by now you know the BX basic limitations, so I'll get to it now.
What I always tend to do, is first decide what I want the modules to run at (100MHz cl2 or 66MHz cl3 or whatever you want), then go through my stash of memory modules to see what I have matching up or is close to what I want.
I prefer to use modules which are similar, so same chip density, chips from the same manufacturer (preferably identical memory modules if I happen to have some). With BX I'd often end up with something like 1*128MB (16 chips, 8 on each side) and 2*64MB (8 chips, 8 on one side) as this is a nice way to make use of some of the smaller modules I have laying around.
Usually putting the maximum amount of memory and run this at the maximum available frequency, may result in instability.
But generally speaking, iirc it had to do with how many banks of memory you run on a board and at what speed (in mhz and in cas latencies). The fewer memory banks and the lower speed the memory is run at, the higher your chances are that this won't cause any stability issues.
Mixing all kinds of different memory modules together (say putting a 32MB (16 chips), then 256MB (8 chips) and then 128MB (16 chips)) may increase your chances of stability issues, so I try to prevent doing this since I have loads of memory modules to pick from anyway and I'm in a way a perfectionist.
Phil used over 256MB RAM and these days there isn't much reason to go with less anyway, but I have run a Celeron 400 with 192MB RAM and WinME just fine basically.
So suppose you have 2 memory slots. Seek out 2*128MB modules PC-133 with 8 chips each side, since you mention wanting to go to 133MHz FSB. Use identical modules or as close as you can find them, preferably of the same manufacturer.