Yellow and orange, blue and black, green and red: you’ll find the RAM slots on motherboards in all sorts of color pairs. But what exactly do those pairs mean and how does it affect you when system building or upgrading your current rig?
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The Question
SuperUser reader Totymedli is curious about the color coding of RAM slots:
What’s the solution for his blue screen installation issues?
The Answer
SuperUser contributor Enigma breaks the code:
You should install 2 of the same sticks as a matching pair on the same color slots and then another 2 that are the same in the remaining two slots.
Ideally you want to have all memory be identical in a system or else you will end up with some memory being potentially downclocked (or voltage/multiplier) to the lowest common denominator.
Further reading:
Tom’s Hardware Forum: How to Install Dual Channel [Memory]?
Hardware Secrets: Everything You Need to Know About Dual-, Triple-, and Quad-Channel Memory Architectures
RELATED: Should You Build Your Own PC?
In light of that, Ecnerwal’s advice on the importance of checking the manual carefully should not be ignored:
As in all things related to electronics and computer building, reading the manual first and avoiding blue screens of death (or, worse, damaging hardware) is always preferred to trial-and-error. When in doubt, reference the manual.
But after I tried to install a third one it always throws me a blue screen of death. Is there an order how should I install RAM to the board?
The answer is Yes, there is an order, and the details are found in your motherboard manual, which nearly always has detailed instructions for what order the memory slots should be filled, and which configurations will work, so you can simply put it in once and have it work, rather than:
I just put the 2 RAM in, and after a few tries it always worked.
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