![find me in your memory find me in your memory](https://www.viu.com/ott/id/articles/wp-content/uploads/2020/04/sinopsis-find-me-in-your-memory-episode-15-kim-dong-wook-moon-ga-young-1200x800.jpeg)
Unganged (2圆4bit Dual Channel) or Ganged Mode (1x128bit Dual Channel). You can also find out further information on what kind of dual channel mode you run under “DC Mode”. I can find information’s about the size of your memory, in my case in the screenshot I have 8GB (8192 Mbytes) DDR3 RAM integrated. For example the type of RAM you did integrate in your system.
![find me in your memory find me in your memory](https://koreasowls.fr/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/Find-Me-In-Your-Memory-03.jpg)
That is all… you now know in what kind of mode your memory is running.īut as you can see, you can find some other information about your RAM there. You would read “Single” there if your RAM is running in the slower single channel mode. If you can read “Dual” beside it, then everything is ok and your RAM is running in dual channel mode. To find out if our RAM (Random-Access Memory) is running in dual channel mode, we now just have to look for the label called “Channels #”. This is the area where we can get some information about our memory, the so-called RAM. Since we want to find out information’s about memory, it is somewhat self-explanatory that we now click on the “Memory” tab. You see now a small window with some tabs on top that are called “CPU”, “Caches”, “Mainboard”, “Memory”, “SPD”, “Graphics” and “About”. So, we can indeed use it to find out if we integrated our memory modules correctly on the mainboard and if our system memory is not running in the slower single channel mode, as we want it to run in the faster dual channel mode that gives us a much better data transfer rate. This is basically a tool you can use to gathers different information’s of your system hardware.
#Find me in your memory install#
What you can do is, downloading a tool called CPU-Z and install it on your system. But there is another easy method that you can use to look if everything is right and if your memory is running in dual channel mode. I told him about a way to proof it while his computer is restarting, however he didn´t really get where he has to look. He was unsure if he did integrate his memory modules correctly on his mainboard to let the memory run in the fast Dual Channel Mode. A friend found some nice hardware deals on Amazon and upgraded his system and asked me later how he can check if his computer memory is running in dual channel mode.