I was drawn to this sale item mainly based on its sale price which also included postage at a price I deemed fair, in relation to its age (relative period of technology) used condition and compared to new modules still being offered by others. Its brand is well known for good quality, even if faulty it could be changed anyway, so this ensured a good outcome even if a faulty module did by chance came, so this added to a confident purchase.
Worked a treat, on an old desktop, made sure they were the correct type, very important as there are so many different specs, which are sometimes confusing. It is often difficult to tell what capacity the cards are, as its not always marked on them, especially the generic types, these were fine.
Well yes it's memory and has stopped the wife complaining about her slow PC, so yes it works. And got windows 7 running nicely.
This seems good so far. No problems and revived a machine that had been struggling to run XP on but 512mb of RAM
Always check your motherboard's manual to see which type (DDR, DDR2, DDR3) of RAM but also what speed (MHz) it can handle. Don't be too quick to buy the RAM which are listed at a cheap price. They tend to be high density chips with no brand name and your motherboard will most likely only recognise half or worse not at all. For help with high and low density please read this guide: http://reviews.ebay.com.au/Myth-Low-Density-vs-High-Density-memory-modules_W0QQugidZ10000000000790349?ssPageName=BUYGD:CAT:-1:LISTINGS:1 Its all about how the chips are arranged. Thanks for reading.
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