Hey Ka dadi,

If you want a real simple way to solve all this, just go to www.crucial.com
and use their memory scan. It'll tell you the specs of your memory, as
well as give you options to buy from them.

Honestly, there is something to buying name brands when it comes to
computer hardware, but if you don't want to buy from there, you can
always just take the information from there and browse the internet
for something else compatible.

Hope this helps,
N3TS3cure

On Oct 9, 3:48 pm, Dentist <[email protected]> wrote:
> you need to know the maximum speed the motherboard is capable to run
> so you take all advantages and be ready to rock
>
> On Oct 5, 12:55 pm, KwikOne <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Just look at the BelArc report... see where it says 'bus speed'?
> > That is the memory speed
>
> > On Oct 4, 11:50 am, Ka dadi <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > *Hey guys, *
> > > *
> > > *
> > > *I finally got my memory speed, its 667Mhz (512 Mb DDR2).... I had to 
> > > remove
> > > manually and check since bios didn;t help much. belarc.com gave me a
> > > detailed info abt my hardware and software, but it also didn't show my ram
> > > speed.*
> > > *
> > > *
> > > *(the good thing is I discovered there is an extra slot, so I wonna just 
> > > get
> > > a 1gb Ram and slide it right there! hopefully to achieve 1.5gb ram or 
> > > more)*
> > > *
> > > *
> > > *Thanks folks..*
> > > *
> > > *
> > > *
> > > *
>
> > > On Mon, Oct 4, 2010 at 2:30 PM, KwikOne <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > > It ALL DEPENDS on your current ram. Is it DDR, DDR2, DDR3, or what?
> > > > What you could do to determine what speed you currently are is:
> > > > 1) download and run BelArc Advisor (from belarc.com) - that will give
> > > > you
> > > >    a complete inventory of hardware and software on your system.
> > > >    (It will indicate what memory bus speed it is using)
> > > > 2) Give us the make/model of your system
>
> > > > On Oct 2, 10:31 am, Mohammad AbuShady <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > > > I think i know what your friend is talking about, i think he means the
> > > > bus
> > > > > speed, and i don't think that ram could force the system to 
> > > > > overclock, i
> > > > > believe the opposite is valid though, i don't remember the common 
> > > > > speeds,
> > > > > but there's 667 and 800 i  think, and 1088 (maybe lol) anyway, if u 
> > > > > have
> > > > a
> > > > > mother board  that supports up to 800 but the rams are 667 then the
> > > > system
> > > > > will run as 667,  but if the opposite the ram wont  speed up the 
> > > > > system
> > > > bus
> > > > > speed, and also if u have 2 ram chips with different speeds, the 
> > > > > system
> > > > will
> > > > > use the lowest speed, so i advice u to check ur system speed, not 
> > > > > because
> > > > of
> > > > > this overclock thing, it's more like to prevent the opposite.
>
> > > > > On Sat, Oct 2, 2010 at 10:23 AM, Ka dadi <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > > > > Hi Guys...
>
> > > > > > I have been using my Hp 530, running on Windows 7 86x, The specs 
> > > > > > are as
> > > > > > follows:
>
> > > > > > Ram=  512, processor Speed (celeron) 1.73 Ghz,
>
> > > > > > Now I wanted to upgrade it to Ram of 2Gb. A friend advised I should
> > > > fast
> > > > > > check the ram speed to avoid over-clocking.
>
> > > > > > So, what is this ram speed exactly ? Will it be dangerous to put 2gb
> > > > ram
> > > > > > from 512mb ?
>
> > > > > > Thanks for your responses!
>
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