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Problems with additional RAM aand NIC
X posted. 2nd attempt as the first time I left the header off and it hasn't
appeared! I recently purchased additional RAM for my system. The existing was 2x256k and for the remaining slot I bought 512k.(All the same spec/supplier/manufacturer). The system has been stable for some time so I added the vcache 512000 entry into the system.ini and let that run with no problems for a couple of days. I then added the 512k RAM which the Award BIOS recognised and dealt with. Unfortunately, I then realised that there was no Internet access. The 2091 router saw the PC power up but no data sent to line. Checks on the system revealed a problem with the VIA Rhine II fast Ethernet adapter. Now try as I might with reloads of software from the ASUS and Windows CDs, I couldn't get the NIC to be accepted by Windows. Even turning the LAN off and on in the BIOS was recognised by Windows but did not resolve the problem. Finally I powered off, removed the additional RAM (no difference) and then restored a previous version of the Registry and hey presto all OK. Question was I just unlucky or is there a tie in between the additional RAM and the Rhine adapter? Alan |
#2
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Problems with additional RAM aand NIC
"Alan" wrote in message ... X posted. 2nd attempt as the first time I left the header off and it hasn't appeared! I recently purchased additional RAM for my system. The existing was 2x256k and for the remaining slot I bought 512k.(All the same spec/supplier/manufacturer). The system has been stable for some time so I added the vcache 512000 entry into the system.ini and let that run with no problems for a couple of days. I then added the 512k RAM which the Award BIOS recognised and dealt with. Unfortunately, I then realised that there was no Internet access. The 2091 router saw the PC power up but no data sent to line. Checks on the system revealed a problem with the VIA Rhine II fast Ethernet adapter. Now try as I might with reloads of software from the ASUS and Windows CDs, I couldn't get the NIC to be accepted by Windows. Even turning the LAN off and on in the BIOS was recognised by Windows but did not resolve the problem. Finally I powered off, removed the additional RAM (no difference) and then restored a previous version of the Registry and hey presto all OK. Question was I just unlucky or is there a tie in between the additional RAM and the Rhine adapter? Alan I cannot think of a reason the NIC would fail when adding memory ...but then again NIC drivers do get corrupted ... reboot into safe mode and remove all entries relating to your NIC (and any other NIC cards found there) ..you may have a ghost NIC in there...(control paneldevice manager reboot and let windows go through the install of the drivers again .. post back : |
#3
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Problems with additional RAM aand NIC
"Haggis" wrote in message ... "Alan" wrote in message ... X posted. 2nd attempt as the first time I left the header off and it hasn't appeared! I recently purchased additional RAM for my system. The existing was 2x256k and for the remaining slot I bought 512k.(All the same spec/supplier/manufacturer). The system has been stable for some time so I added the vcache 512000 entry into the system.ini and let that run with no problems for a couple of days. I then added the 512k RAM which the Award BIOS recognised and dealt with. Unfortunately, I then realised that there was no Internet access. The 2091 router saw the PC power up but no data sent to line. Checks on the system revealed a problem with the VIA Rhine II fast Ethernet adapter. Now try as I might with reloads of software from the ASUS and Windows CDs, I couldn't get the NIC to be accepted by Windows. Even turning the LAN off and on in the BIOS was recognised by Windows but did not resolve the problem. Finally I powered off, removed the additional RAM (no difference) and then restored a previous version of the Registry and hey presto all OK. Question was I just unlucky or is there a tie in between the additional RAM and the Rhine adapter? Alan I cannot think of a reason the NIC would fail when adding memory ...but then again NIC drivers do get corrupted ... reboot into safe mode and remove all entries relating to your NIC (and any other NIC cards found there) ..you may have a ghost NIC in there...(control paneldevice manager reboot and let windows go through the install of the drivers again .. post back : I note your comments. Some time ago I did clear out ghosts but I will check again. In the meantime, I also took the liberty of e-mailing ASUS and spent time surfing to see if there is anything the MOBO can or cannot do. One of ASUS posts for the A7V8X-X suggested there may be a problem depending on the speed of the FSB. I am using an AMD Athlon XP 2200+ and the BIOS is set to auto for this and I am having difficulty finding what speed it is running at in terms of FSB. The spec. for the MOBO for the Memory says 3 x DDR DIMM Sockets, Max 3 GB unbuffered PC2100/1600 non-ECC DDR SDRAM. A note then says:- PC3200 maximum to 2 banks only. PC2700 maximum to 4 banks only. I am using PC2700 so am limited to 4 banks - but does anybody know what the deffinition of a bank is? In addition the CPU socket spec. says that when using 333MHz FSB CPU, system memory supports DDR333 only. I don't understand this, can anybody explain the significance. Thanks Alan |
#4
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Problems with additional RAM aand NIC
"Alan" wrote in message ... "Haggis" wrote in message ... "Alan" wrote in message ... X posted. 2nd attempt as the first time I left the header off and it hasn't appeared! I recently purchased additional RAM for my system. The existing was 2x256k and for the remaining slot I bought 512k.(All the same spec/supplier/manufacturer). The system has been stable for some time so I added the vcache 512000 entry into the system.ini and let that run with no problems for a couple of days. I then added the 512k RAM which the Award BIOS recognised and dealt with. Unfortunately, I then realised that there was no Internet access. The 2091 router saw the PC power up but no data sent to line. Checks on the system revealed a problem with the VIA Rhine II fast Ethernet adapter. Now try as I might with reloads of software from the ASUS and Windows CDs, I couldn't get the NIC to be accepted by Windows. Even turning the LAN off and on in the BIOS was recognised by Windows but did not resolve the problem. Finally I powered off, removed the additional RAM (no difference) and then restored a previous version of the Registry and hey presto all OK. Question was I just unlucky or is there a tie in between the additional RAM and the Rhine adapter? Alan I cannot think of a reason the NIC would fail when adding memory ...but then again NIC drivers do get corrupted ... reboot into safe mode and remove all entries relating to your NIC (and any other NIC cards found there) ..you may have a ghost NIC in there...(control paneldevice manager reboot and let windows go through the install of the drivers again .. post back : I note your comments. Some time ago I did clear out ghosts but I will check again. In the meantime, I also took the liberty of e-mailing ASUS and spent time surfing to see if there is anything the MOBO can or cannot do. One of ASUS posts for the A7V8X-X suggested there may be a problem depending on the speed of the FSB. I am using an AMD Athlon XP 2200+ and the BIOS is set to auto for this and I am having difficulty finding what speed it is running at in terms of FSB. The spec. for the MOBO for the Memory says 3 x DDR DIMM Sockets, Max 3 GB unbuffered PC2100/1600 non-ECC DDR SDRAM. A note then says:- PC3200 maximum to 2 banks only. PC2700 maximum to 4 banks only. I am using PC2700 so am limited to 4 banks - but does anybody know what the deffinition of a bank is? In addition the CPU socket spec. says that when using 333MHz FSB CPU, system memory supports DDR333 only. I don't understand this, can anybody explain the significance. Thanks Alan a "Bank" is the slot the memory goes into (what you are using sounds ok ....did you try just the 512mb ?) FSB of the processor has to match the FSB speed of the motherboard/memory or they do not communicate properly (Front Side Bus) |
#5
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Problems with additional RAM aand NIC
"Haggis" wrote in message ... "Alan" wrote in message ... "Haggis" wrote in message ... "Alan" wrote in message ... X posted. 2nd attempt as the first time I left the header off and it hasn't appeared! I recently purchased additional RAM for my system. The existing was 2x256k and for the remaining slot I bought 512k.(All the same spec/supplier/manufacturer). The system has been stable for some time so I added the vcache 512000 entry into the system.ini and let that run with no problems for a couple of days. I then added the 512k RAM which the Award BIOS recognised and dealt with. Unfortunately, I then realised that there was no Internet access. The 2091 router saw the PC power up but no data sent to line. Checks on the system revealed a problem with the VIA Rhine II fast Ethernet adapter. Now try as I might with reloads of software from the ASUS and Windows CDs, I couldn't get the NIC to be accepted by Windows. Even turning the LAN off and on in the BIOS was recognised by Windows but did not resolve the problem. Finally I powered off, removed the additional RAM (no difference) and then restored a previous version of the Registry and hey presto all OK. Question was I just unlucky or is there a tie in between the additional RAM and the Rhine adapter? Alan I cannot think of a reason the NIC would fail when adding memory ...but then again NIC drivers do get corrupted ... reboot into safe mode and remove all entries relating to your NIC (and any other NIC cards found there) ..you may have a ghost NIC in there...(control paneldevice manager reboot and let windows go through the install of the drivers again .. post back : I note your comments. Some time ago I did clear out ghosts but I will check again. In the meantime, I also took the liberty of e-mailing ASUS and spent time surfing to see if there is anything the MOBO can or cannot do. One of ASUS posts for the A7V8X-X suggested there may be a problem depending on the speed of the FSB. I am using an AMD Athlon XP 2200+ and the BIOS is set to auto for this and I am having difficulty finding what speed it is running at in terms of FSB. The spec. for the MOBO for the Memory says 3 x DDR DIMM Sockets, Max 3 GB unbuffered PC2100/1600 non-ECC DDR SDRAM. A note then says:- PC3200 maximum to 2 banks only. PC2700 maximum to 4 banks only. I am using PC2700 so am limited to 4 banks - but does anybody know what the deffinition of a bank is? In addition the CPU socket spec. says that when using 333MHz FSB CPU, system memory supports DDR333 only. I don't understand this, can anybody explain the significance. Thanks Alan a "Bank" is the slot the memory goes into (what you are using sounds ok ...did you try just the 512mb ?) FSB of the processor has to match the FSB speed of the motherboard/memory or they do not communicate properly (Front Side Bus) I can't seem to find what FSB speed the processor is running at. When I check in the BIOS nothing appears to relate to it and the settings are auto. The BIOS correctly identifies the AMD OK at POST but no FSB detail. Alan |
#6
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Problems with additional RAM aand NIC
"Alan" wrote in message ... "Haggis" wrote in message ... "Alan" wrote in message ... "Haggis" wrote in message ... "Alan" wrote in message ... X posted. 2nd attempt as the first time I left the header off and it hasn't appeared! I recently purchased additional RAM for my system. The existing was 2x256k and for the remaining slot I bought 512k.(All the same spec/supplier/manufacturer). The system has been stable for some time so I added the vcache 512000 entry into the system.ini and let that run with no problems for a couple of days. I then added the 512k RAM which the Award BIOS recognised and dealt with. Unfortunately, I then realised that there was no Internet access. The 2091 router saw the PC power up but no data sent to line. Checks on the system revealed a problem with the VIA Rhine II fast Ethernet adapter. Now try as I might with reloads of software from the ASUS and Windows CDs, I couldn't get the NIC to be accepted by Windows. Even turning the LAN off and on in the BIOS was recognised by Windows but did not resolve the problem. Finally I powered off, removed the additional RAM (no difference) and then restored a previous version of the Registry and hey presto all OK. Question was I just unlucky or is there a tie in between the additional RAM and the Rhine adapter? Alan I cannot think of a reason the NIC would fail when adding memory ...but then again NIC drivers do get corrupted ... reboot into safe mode and remove all entries relating to your NIC (and any other NIC cards found there) ..you may have a ghost NIC in there...(control paneldevice manager reboot and let windows go through the install of the drivers again .. post back : I note your comments. Some time ago I did clear out ghosts but I will check again. In the meantime, I also took the liberty of e-mailing ASUS and spent time surfing to see if there is anything the MOBO can or cannot do. One of ASUS posts for the A7V8X-X suggested there may be a problem depending on the speed of the FSB. I am using an AMD Athlon XP 2200+ and the BIOS is set to auto for this and I am having difficulty finding what speed it is running at in terms of FSB. The spec. for the MOBO for the Memory says 3 x DDR DIMM Sockets, Max 3 GB unbuffered PC2100/1600 non-ECC DDR SDRAM. A note then says:- PC3200 maximum to 2 banks only. PC2700 maximum to 4 banks only. I am using PC2700 so am limited to 4 banks - but does anybody know what the deffinition of a bank is? In addition the CPU socket spec. says that when using 333MHz FSB CPU, system memory supports DDR333 only. I don't understand this, can anybody explain the significance. Thanks Alan a "Bank" is the slot the memory goes into (what you are using sounds ok ...did you try just the 512mb ?) FSB of the processor has to match the FSB speed of the motherboard/memory or they do not communicate properly (Front Side Bus) I can't seem to find what FSB speed the processor is running at. When I check in the BIOS nothing appears to relate to it and the settings are auto. The BIOS correctly identifies the AMD OK at POST but no FSB detail. Alan if hit "pause" quick enough at boot time , you should see the CPU speed and stepping.(and IIRC you can see it in sysinfo under accessories/tools ..going from memory here :) most motherboards will detect and automatically adjust bus speed to match the CPU and Memory |
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