I have an iMac DV Special Edition with 128 MB RAM.
I’d like to add more RAM. Questions:
Is that 128 MB (or any portion of it) soldered to my motherboard, or is it all in the two slots? (I haven’t flipped it over to look for myself, yet–just hoping someone might have some experience here). Apple’s TIL doesn’t specify.
Are the DIMMs (168-pin PC100 SDRAM) compatible with a PowerMac 7300, which takes “168-pin DIMMs”? (I’ve seen no specification of SDRAM or PC100 there… are there differences, or is it implied that all 168-pin DIMMs are also PC100 SDRAM?) In short, I’d like to buy new RAM for my iMac, and, if I have any of the old RAM leftover, plug that into my PowerMac 7300.
Lots of technobabble. Any help would be appreciated.
Actually, Apple’s TIL does specify… you just need to know how to read between the lines. The iMac/DV is expandable to 512M. If 128M were fixed (soldered), you’d never be able to get to 512M. In other words, it’s all socketed.
BTW, some iMac/DVs shipped with only 64M, which further reinforces this point.
I’m not 100% sure, but I think this should work. You probably couldn’t go the other way (7300 to iMac).
Not terribly explicit. The reason I wondered whether any RAM was hardwired is b/c I’ve had other Macs where this was the case–they had their base RAM soldered to the motherboard, and open slots for additional RAM. (And even ones that did not recognize the maximum amt. of RAM that you could physically plug in.)
I’m guessing that the 64 MB base RAM for the iMac is just plugged into one of the two slots, with the addl. 64 MB that the DV comes with plugged into the second.
If you’re running OS 8.6 or higher, the Apple System Profiler should tell you what type of module is loaded into each socket. That’s the easy way to find out without opening the case.