Hi Hugh,

From the part numbers on the chips themselves (not the stick part No:) 
you should be able to get at the manufacturers data sheet and then the 
size.  Then multiply the size by the number of bits  For example 16Mb x 
32 bit, is an 64Mb chip.  16 chips on a stick will give you 128Mb.

Assuming they are 32Mb, and have 8 chips, a common device would be
8Mb x 4 bits or 16Mb x 2 bits.  I'm sure you get the Idea.

The easy way is just to put them in a tester / machine and see !! ;-)  
But since you haven't got one !  

On Friday 24 February 2006 19:03, Hugh Gundersen wrote:
> Hi folks
>
> Recently I have found some 168pin PC memory modules and I thought
> they were 256Mb but I have been told they might be just 32Mb.
>
> I do not have a computer that takes 168pin modules so has anyone got
> the slightest idea how I can find out.
>
> I have tried a Google search on the numbers on one of the actual
> chips but can only get the maker and Samsung just tell who stocks it
> not what it is.
>
> I have a part # on the PCB but again that comes up with a supplier
> and a pages asking me to fill in for a quote??
>
> Any ideas?
>
>
>
> Sir Hugh of Bognor

-- 
Best Regards:
     Derrick.
     Pontefract Linux Users Group.
     plug at play-net.co.uk

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