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I bought an old Dell Poweredge 2650 off ebay to use as a dev server, but I need to get more RAM for it. From what I understand there were 2 versions of the 2650 released, with the older version only supporting PC1600 RAM (200MHz) and the 2nd version supporting PC2400. Unfortunately Dell thought it wasn't necessary to label their servers as such so I can't tell what version I have.

Does anyone know if there is a way to tell without buying and testing RAM in the server?

4 Answers 4

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Here are the memory specs for the PE2650:

Memory

Architecture 72-bit ECC PC-1600 DDR SDRAM DIMMs, with 2-way interleaving

Memory module sockets six 72-bit wide 184-pin DIMM sockets

Memory module capacities 128-, 256-, 512 MB, or 1-GB registered SDRAM DIMMs, rated for 200-MHz DDR operation

Minimum RAM 256 MB

Maximum RAM 6 GB

And here's the user manual section on installing\adding memory:

http://support.dell.com/support/edocs/systems/pe2650/en/it/5g375c60.htm#1070776

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If you enter the support section of the Dell website, and enter the server's service tag, you can then click on the link 'System Configuration' listed under the 'product support' section.

When I do this with my Dell servers, it tells me the speed of the memory supplied with the system.

I've tried to give you a hyperlink for 'System Configuration', but it seems to contain lots of session data, if I attempt to remove it, I get redirected to an error page.

Edit: Try this link, it might work.

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  • +1 Dell support is usually great for this. Servcie Tag gives a wealth of info.
    – Dave M
    Mar 10, 2010 at 13:06
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Not an expert on RAM, but Kingston.com just shows one option for RAM. Personally, I'd get a couple of PC2400 sticks and try it - if there aren't any pin differences between the two, it's probably just a speed difference, and the faster memory should work at the slower speeds.

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If it runs, you could check with SIW for windows, or lshw on linux

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  • Thanks, I'll remember that for future reference, but unfortunately I don't have any DDR RAM to boot the server up and test it. Mar 10, 2010 at 10:18
  • dmidecode would probably be more appropriate in Linux.
    – Warner
    Mar 10, 2010 at 14:40

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