4x4gb of DDR3 ram sticks.
Bristol
£10
1 of 3
Description
For sale is bundle of four DDR3 RAM sticks, each stick is 4GB, making 2 matched pairs with following serial numbers for each pair, giving total of 16GB for dual channel and overclocking with overvoltig.
Removed about month ago from my spare mobo I sold to my neighbour, after entire bundle sat on a shelf in my studio, as a spare, ready for a quick swap, in case my music workstation broke on me during important session, but it never happened.
Tested today for a brief moment, just to check if it shows up and boots up normally, I cycled it few times to see if my pc works as usual whilst on it and that's it.
Rather in clean condition as since it's in my hands, it has never has been used beyond testing, once back in time, and then today again.
IMPORTANT:
Model F3-17000CL11D-8GBXL that is visible on every sticker, describes a mached pair of 2 sticks, as they were originally sold, in sets, and it is not a single module size.
Don't get mislead by this, my first impression seeing it back in time, was that it is 8gb x4. Today same, before I even managed to turn it off I could see that clunker already got it wrong, trying to tell me this set of 4 sticks is making 32gb combined size, but no, if you trust AI, you may end up with flip-flops for winter time.
Be advised I am positive that their total, combined size, is 16GB (4x4gb)
A matched pair (2 following serial No's), should go into 2 slots recommended by your mobo's manufacturer, just as if you had only one pair and then the second pair of 2 sticks, with again, 2 following serial numbers, should go into 2 remaining slots. It matters only if you want to get nerdy and dive into a rabbit hole of proper, manual latency tweaking.
Otherwise, for auto and default usage scenarios all of them are "identical enough" to let you siply put them randomly into 4 slots, in any order.
Posted: 4 hours ago
Ad ID: 1800327540
Details
Stay Safe
"Only access Gumtree from gumtree.com and do not follow links sent by other users"
"Share photos and ask lots of questions about the items you are buying and selling"
"If an ad or reply sounds too good to be true, it probably is"
"Use the 'Reply to ad' button for your safety and privacy"
"Don't reply to email addresses hidden in text and pictures"
"Beware of fake Gumtree, eBay or escrow sites and invoices"
1 of 6
