My only remaining suggestions are: 1) return 4GB of memory and replace it with a single 4GB DIMM (there's on on NewEgg that matches by speed and latency), 2) replace the MB.
Sorry but seeing as how you have DDR2 667MHz DIMMs, which theoretically are supported, and they don't all work there aren't many options. If you try removing a device, as suggested by another, to reduce the power load, and that doesn't work, and you've manually set the timings to match, and none of that works, well there's not much else to do. Unless you plan to do CLD on the MB.
Good luck, Jack
________________________________ From: Kendric Beachey kendric.beachey@gmail.com To: kclug kclug@kclug.org; kulua-l kulua-l@googlegroups.com; Mr. James Purl james.purl@gmail.com; Bert Pappas robert.pappas@gmail.com Sent: Monday, November 21, 2011 11:39 AM Subject: Re: Weird memory issue
Hi all, thanks for all the feedback.
I hoped to devote some time to this over the weekend but I didn't get enough time to solve it. However, I did manage to pull some more info.
These are the memory modules in question... http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16820178164%C2%A0 (I ordered two sets of two.)
Also I've attached a photograph of the memory config page in my BIOS. If you take it off of "automatic" there are two manual options. One of them just lets you make changes, while the other, called "aggressive", assigns some values but lets you change them.
I couldn't find any settings for memory voltage, but is that implicit in these settings?
I did toy around with changing some of the settings, mainly forcing it to 667 MHz as that's what the memory is really supposed to be rated for. For the others I tried a few changes but not much as I didn't know what was plausible. Nothing allowed all four sticks to work at once.
If I'd had more time to spend, I'd have done better research on what the settings mean, etc...sorry not to have done so yet.
Kendric Beachey
On Fri, Nov 18, 2011 at 4:58 PM, Kendric Beachey kendric.beachey@gmail.com wrote:
I just got four 2GB memory modules for my computer (running on 1 GB was starting to try my patience). These were destined for the four slots on my motherboard (Intel DG965RY).
These combinations produce a happily working machine:
any one DIMM in any slot any two DIMMs in any two slots any three DIMMs in any three slots
This combination produces a machine that can't get as far as the BIOS power-on self test:
all four DIMMs in all four slots
It fires up the fans and stuff for about five seconds, then shuts off. Then it waits about five seconds, and fires up again...and it repeats the cycle, endlessly, until I pull the plug.
Has anyone seen this sort of thing before? All of the DIMMs and all of the slots have been proven to work in isolation or combinations up to three...it's just when I try to use all four at once that it conks out.
Kendric Beachey
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