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Pentium Silver N5000 accepts 16GB of RAM??

ProDigit
Principiante
10.181 Vistas

From the specs, the N5000 should accept about 8GB of RAM max.
I purchased 16GB and it works fine. Windows recognizes the extra 8GB.


It's a single module.
I never see RAM usage above 7GB though.

I was wondering if the 16GB is fully compatible, or if there are possible issues with running more ram than the specs say they can support?

 

On a side note, I've seen other laptops for sale by HP that are equipped with 16GB modules.

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JayB_Intel
Empleados
10.142 Vistas

Hello ProDigit,


Thank you for posting in the Intel® Communities Support.


Please be advised that the Maximum Supported Memory Size for the Intel® Pentium® Silver N5000 Processor is 8 GB only. Windows OS can acknowledge the 16 GBx1 but your system can only utilize 8 GB as per your processor. Since the Pentium® Silver N5000 is designed for mobile/laptop devices, we do recommend to coordinate with your laptop manufacturer for further assistance as they may have altered features, incorporated customizations, or made other changes to some components for better compatibility with your system.

 


Best regards,

Jay B.


tcsenter89
Nuevo Colaborador I
9.801 Vistas

@JayB_Intel wrote:

Please be advised that the Maximum Supported Memory Size for the Intel® Pentium® Silver N5000 Processor is 8 GB only. Windows OS can acknowledge the 16 GBx1 but your system can only utilize 8 GB as per your processor. Since the Pentium®



This is just incorrect. I recently acquired a Dell Inspiron 3582 with Pentium Silver N5000 specifically to test this very claim, after a user reported on Reddit that he is successfully running 16GB SODIMM in an Inspiron 15 3573 notebook, all memory addressable/useable (minus the small amount for hardware reserved that every system has). I couldn't find a price on the 3573 that I wanted to pay, so I acquired a highly similar (if not shared design) Inspiron 3582 along with two JEDEC standard 16GB (2Rx8) SODIMM modules; one DDR4-2400T and DDR4-2666V (covering my bases).

 

In short, the doggone thing works:

 

msinfo32 (System Information)msinfo32 (System Information)

System PropertiesSystem Properties

Jian1937
Principiante
6.384 Vistas
If you've read carefully you'll realize that yes intel n5000 can indeed acknowledge that it has 16gb RAM heck you can even install 32gb but can only utilize 8gb of it. It's like saying "I'm gonna get 5 girlfriends today" well yes you can, but can you?
tcsenter89
Nuevo Colaborador I
6.367 Vistas

I don't know how it could be explained any more clear to someone who is either 1) adequate IQ or intelligence 2) fluent in English language. I will assume your defect is #2 but confess I can't be sure of it. Perhaps it is the attached images you are not able to see from your location?

 

As I already stated clearly, I specifically tested this claim that the system was merely "reporting" the memory installed but could not actually address or utilize it. I have confirmed this is NOT the case. The system hardware and BIOS (UEFI) is FULLY EXPOSING that addressable memory via memory map, making it FULLY AVAILABLE to developers a.k.a. the operating system.

 

Unless you are unable to view the attached images, or do not understand what you are looking at, this is plainly evident. Let me (again) spell things out for you:

 

"Installed Physical Memory" = the memory reported as merely installed (reported via SPD), usable or not

"Total Physical Memory" = the portion of above exposed/available to the system via physical memory map

"Useable Physical Memory" = Total Physical Memory above minus hardware reservations e.g. shared graphics memory available only to the graphics controller/driver

"Available Physical Memory" = Free memory (RAM) that is not being utilized by OS, apps

 

This has also been confirmed under Linux, per the link I provided in the discussion. If you are still unclear about anything, go back to my first post and read it again, until something 'clicks' for you that you didn't understand before.

TripleAye
Principiante
2.574 Vistas

Would it be safe to assume this would work for the N5030? Also did the faster memory work as well? If I may what ram did you get specifically? Thanks for any help! Appreciate your time.

tcsenter89
Nuevo Colaborador I
2.547 Vistas

Yes there appears to be some systems with N5030 or N5040 models that actually shipped from the manufacturer with 16GB. But again the manufacturer BIOS meminit code will need to support it. The module I used was:

 

SAMSUNG 16GB 2Rx8 PC4-2666V DDR4 1.2v
M471A2K43DB1

 

You could also use DDR4-2400: e.g.

 

SAMSUNG M471A2K43CB1

 

It will operate at whatever is the max supported DRAM frequency for the CPU. For this Pentium Silver line it appears to be 2400MHz

n_scott_pearson
Superusuario
9.751 Vistas

I agree that what @JayB_Intel has stated is indeed incorrect, but you need to understand that, because Intel has stated that the maximum supported is 8GB, this means that Intel has not validated - nor do they warranty - that more than 8GB will work. It might work or it might not - and, if it does, there is no guarantee that it will continue to work.

Just saying,

...S

tcsenter89
Nuevo Colaborador I
9.737 Vistas

@n_scott_pearson wrote:

I agree that what @JayB_Intel has stated is indeed incorrect, but you need to understand that, because Intel has stated that the maximum supported is 8GB, this means that Intel has not validated - nor do they warranty - that more than 8GB will work. It might work or it might not - and, if it does, there is no guarantee that it will continue to work.


Intel does not "support" nor "warranty" any products other than Intel branded/marketed, without a business relationship with the customer e.g. OEM, reseller, integrator, etc. The entire line of Goldmont, Goldmont+, e.g. N5000 and it's N5030 'refresh' replacement were never marketed or sold to the public and are all discontinued, anyway. Even if it had officially supported 16GB, the OEM/IHV who used it in their product would be responsible to "support" or "warranty" their product, not Intel.

n_scott_pearson
Superusuario
9.735 Vistas

Yes, you are correct. In this case, it is the Integrator that would have a warranty from Intel. The End User only has a warranty from the Integrator.

...S

Blueyezboi
Principiante
5.517 Vistas

This totally works! saved my HP 15-dw0083wm! AND It runs at 2666mhz! laptop came with only one ddr4 slot (with a 4gb ram and physical HDD!) put a 16gb Samsung ddr4@2666mhz and new sata SSD and it read all of it and it's reporting that speed. checked a 3200mhz and 2400mhz RAM chip 2400=2400 but the 3200=2666 so I put a 2666 16gb RAM and SOOOO MUCH FASTER!

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