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- From: wdarden@nrtc.nrtc.northrop.com (Bill Darden <wdarden>)
- Newsgroups: comp.sys.ibm.pc.hardware
- Subject: Re: 3-chip vs 9-chip SIMMs?
- Message-ID: <43230@gremlin.nrtc.northrop.com>
- Date: 16 Dec 92 16:03:09 GMT
- References: <Bz9M37.I40@inews.Intel.COM> <28552@oasys.dt.navy.mil> <1gm7hbINNk3v@agate.berkeley.edu>
- Sender: news@gremlin.nrtc.northrop.com
- Reply-To: wdarden@nrtc.nrtc.northrop.com (Bill Darden)
- Organization: Northrop Research & Technology Center, Palos Verdes, CA
- Lines: 46
-
- In article <1gm7hbINNk3v@agate.berkeley.edu> shyguy@ocf.berkeley.edu (David S. Shy) writes:
- >> >Which is the older technology: 3-chip SIMMs or 9-chip SIMMs? My PC
- >> >takes 3-chip SIMMs, and I have noticed that 9-chip SIMMs are far more
- >> >easily available in the marketplace. Are 3-chip SIMMs an older
- >> >technology, and likely to disappear from the market in the near
- >> >future? Or are they simply newer, and not as widespread yet in the market?
- >> >
- >> >Are 3-chip SIMMs incompatible with 9-chip SIMMs?
- >
- >from the timeline of my life and my near-never-ending-search-for-the-right-
- >simms, i would say that the 9 chips are older...
- >
- Stuff deleted
- >
- >i have 4 1 meg 9 chip simms and 8 1 meg 3 chips (all 70 ns)
- >and all 9 chip in their own bank 3 chips in their own bank...
- >if you mix them in teh same bank, you might run into problems...
- >
- More stuff deleted
-
- For my two cents.....
-
- Three chip SIMMs (and SIPs) are less expensive to manufacture than
- their nine chip brothers; hence, that is what the stores are selling
- to maintain their margins. The real question is if your motherboard
- will support the three chip version?
-
- An example.....
-
- Three chip 256K SIMMs use two 44256 (4x256 = 1 Mbit) chips and one
- 41256 (1x256 Kbit) chip to make up the 256K x 9 bits. Four of these
- puppies will give you 1 MByte of RAM. As a general rule, if your
- motherboard will support 1 Mbit (1x1024) chips, it will refresh the
- 4x256 (1 Mbit) chips. The same rule generally holds for using larger
- chips.
-
- I agree that it is not a good idea mixing SIMM (or SIP) types or
- speeds within a bank because of the memory interleaving within a bank
- or between banks. IMHO, the trade off is less heat and power
- requirements for the three chip versions vs. flexibility from
- motherboard to motherboad for the nine chip versions. I prefer nine
- chip SIMMs or SIPs. BTW, a SIP is a SIMM with pins.
-
- Regards,
-
- BiLL.....
-