Wednesday, September 19, 2018

memory - Installed 32GB RAM and laptop won't boot


What happens: Works fine with 16GB. With 32GB, powers-on but screen is blank. Tried second laptop (also ivybridge) and found same.


Laptop: W110ER with i7 3820QM Ivybridge cpu and Win7 server 2008 R2 standard SP1. http://www.notebookcheck.net/Review-Clevo-W110ER-Barebone-Subnotebook.75104.0.html see current cpuz http://valid.x86.fr/0fbz5t


Memory: 32GB DDR3 1867 MHz SO-DIMM Memory Kit (2 x 16GB)


Background: The W110ER (for reasons I don't know) supports 16GB (2 x 8GB modules) of 1600 DDR3. In the past I have learned that often the max ram is simply what the mfg thought was the most ram anyone would put in the laptop or was available at the time of product launch (I had an HP with a spec max 2GB of RAM and later found that 8GB worked fine, it was an x32 OEM). So, I ignore the RAM specs. Right now, I am running 16GB of 2133 DDR3 RAM underclocked slightly to 2128 (spec is 8GB 1600 mhz max and 16GB 1333 Mhz max).


A little research:


Test: I installed each 16GB module individually and had same lights on no screen response.


What I want to know: Why won't the laptop boot and what do I do to get it to boot?


Answer



The maximum memory is often for all banks of memory being fitted. That would be 4 slots worth of memory so 4 x 8GB, the fact that laptops often only have 2 slots is irrelevant.


To explain; the processor will have 2 banks of memory and allow two DIMMs to be on that bank. They will then use a "chip select" line to select a DIMM within the bank. This allows them to cut down on the number of address lines coming out of the processor while still allowing the use of more memory.


If your laptop had 4 DIMM slots I would expect your 32GB to work as 4x8GB, but not necessarily 2x16GB as there may not be enough address lines going to the DIMM slots.




To clarify, what this means for a processor claiming to support 32GB (for example an Ivy Bridge CPU) is that it is most likely to only support 8GB DIMMs. This give the CPU its max RAM of 32GB in 4 DIMMS, and it is not likely to be able to support 16GB DIMMs.


From Wikipedia:DDR3



The DDR3 standard permits DRAM chip capacities of up to 8 gibibits, and up to 4 ranks of 64 bits each for a total maximum of 16 GiB per DDR3 DIMM. Because of a hardware limitation not fixed until Ivy Bridge-E in 2013, most older Intel CPUs only support up to 4 gibibit chips for 8 GiB DIMMs



That citation carries on to say that AMD supports 16GB DDR3 DIMMs just fine.


A newer CPU, such as a Haswell or later, CPU would definitely be able to support 16GB DIMMs (4 x 16 = 64).


UPDATE - this explanation came from the vendor:


The main problem is that the MRC (memory reference code) - which is part of the BIOS - does not support modules based on 8 Gigabit DRAM components (16GB modules consist of 8Gb components).


The MRC code reads out the memory-modules SPD-settings and finds that this module is using DRAM-chips with 8Gb capacity. Next it tries to look up the settings for the memory-controller in a table, but can not find any entries for 8Gb chips in the table.


As a result, it crashes.


If the MRC-software was modified - which nobody seems able to as the code is Intel proprietary and difficult to understand - your Ivybridge eventually might boot.


The next hurdle is a hardware limitation inside the CPU (can't get past first hurdle so this second hurdle is theoretical). Intel has said the hardware is missing in Ivybridge as well as most Haswells. Support for 16GB per module begins with 5th generation CPUs (broadwell).


No comments:

Post a Comment

hard drive - Leaving bad sectors in unformatted partition?

Laptop was acting really weird, and copy and seek times were really slow, so I decided to scan the hard drive surface. I have a couple hundr...