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Questions about GIGABYTE products => Motherboards with Intel processors => Topic started by: Synaps3 on January 10, 2015, 11:02:48 am

Title: A design suggestion - SIMM RAM slots
Post by: Synaps3 on January 10, 2015, 11:02:48 am
Whenever I build a computer, there is always one thing that gets me painfully close to destroying the motherboard or my hands; it's inserting the RAM. If I'm upgrading RAM I often have to remove the board from the case just to put the RAM in because it bends the board from the force.

Back in the DOS days, computers used to use SIMM modules instead of DIMM (which are used today). The main difference between SIMM and DIMM (other than speed) is the ZIF (zero insertion force) nature of SIMMs. You just insert the ram at a 45 degree angle and tip it up straight until it clicks into place. There is no extreme downward force, only a bit of lateral force.

I think it would be a good idea to design a new motherboard using those type of sockets for the RAM. The ram would not have to change at all, only the sockets on the board, so it would be something easy for a motherboard manufacturer to incorporate. I suspect it's foxconn that makes the sockets though, so...
Title: Re: A design suggestion - SIMM RAM slots
Post by: autotech on January 11, 2015, 08:15:37 pm
For all the board I have used and built for others I have never had a problem with inserting ram into DIMMs. I have never had to remove a motherboard to do it on any board. I have used well over 500 different boards in different builds so cant understand why it is so difficult for you.