In article <nlqa021b62ntombh3fqt593vjrv70lfuaa.RemoveThis@4ax.com>, MikeM
<mmo45018.RemoveThis@bigpond.net.au> wrote:
> I tried Memtest 86 a while ago and it ran for about an hour with no
> result before I stopped it. Approximately how long should it take to
> finish a test on 2 G DDRAM on a 2 G XP machine?
>
> Thanks
> Mike
A "pass" consists of a complete trip through the 10 or so
tests they have. I would let the tool run until two complete
passes have been done. (Check the pass counter on the screen.)
The main benefit of memtest86+ is checking for "stuck-at" faults.
It doesn't seem to be too good at detecting speed faults that
only seem to show up under Prime95 or gaming situation. So
the test is not conclusive as a system stability test.
Since memtest86+ is self booting, it means your Windows install
won't get corrupted by bad RAM. (The registry could get corrupted
and written back to disk.) By using memtest86+ and finding
no errors, it reduces the chances that when you do boot into
Windows, there will be trouble. So it screens your system
for any really unstable operation (but doesn't guarantee that
the system is totally stable).
Memtest will run forever, if given the chance. Quitting
it should cause the system to reboot, and if you have
removed the floppy, then the next thing you should see,
is your Windows desktop. The purpose of that, is so you
can leave the computer running overnight, with memtest
running on it.
Paul
>
> On Sun, 26 Feb 2006 00:01:12 GMT, MikeM <mmo45018.RemoveThis@bigpond.net.au>
> wrote:
>
> >When I run CheckIt with all 2 G (4x512) of memory installed I get the
> >error message "memory allocation Failed". If I remove 512 M it gives
> >the same message but if I leave only the original 1 G installed there
> >is no error message. It makes no difference which of the 512 DIMMs I
> >use. Does this mean something in my system has problems with more than
> >1 G of memory? The maximum for the motherboard is 4 G.
> >
> >Thanks
> >Mike >> Stay informed about: memory allocation failed