Definitely not a SuperZMicro board. It is a prototype Intel motherboard. The MB has a Intel logo printed right on it. I had shown this board & CPU at a PLUG developers meeting at the technical college on Baseline a few months ago. The motherboard has some very unusual construction features. It cannot be a Clarkdale or Arrandale core since the motherboard definitely has three memory channels and the Clarkdale or Arrandale cores are only dual channel. According to the tables shown on that same Wikipedia page, with the tripple memory channels, it has to be either a Bloomfield (single socket - tripple channel) or a Gulftown (single socket - triple channel). If it is the Bloomfield then it takes DDR3 1066MHz memory rather than the DDR3 1333MHz possible for the later Gulftown cores (the early Gulftown cores still use DDR3 1066MHz memory as well). So perhaps I need DDR3 1066MHz memory rather than the 1333MHz stuff. -- Steven DuChene -----Original Message----- From: Lisa Kachold Sent: Aug 6, 2012 8:57 PM To: "Steven A. DuChene" , Main PLUG discussion list Subject: Re: looking for DDR3 1333MHz ECC memory Hi Steven, On Mon, Aug 6, 2012 at 6:00 PM, Steven A. DuChene wrote: I have a mystery motherboard with what I believe is a Intel Nehalem server cpu. I think the type of memory I need is PC3-10600 DDR3 1333MHz ECC memory. The board seems to have a A, B, and C memory channel from what I can see on the motherboard. I believe I can either put two identical DIMMs in with one in channel A slot 0 and the other in channel B slot 0 or I can I think I can put three identical DIMMs in slot 0 of all three channels. I have tried PC3-10600 DDR3 Non-ECC DIMMs but I did not get any video, Before I go out and purchase some new memory does anyone have any spare PC3-10600 ECC memory DIMMs they could bring to a PLUG meeting so I can try to see if that is the correct memory before I purchase new DIMMs? It looks like you just have the wrong: slots populated or memory for your chipset/mobo: From Wikipedia: Nehalem microarchitecture based Main article: Nehalem (microarchitecture) With the release of the Nehalem microarchitecture in November 2008,[14] Intel introduced a new naming scheme for its Core processors. There are three variants, Core i3, Core i5, and Core i7, but the names no longer correspond to specific technical features like the number of cores. Instead, the brand is now divided from low-level (i3), through mid-range (i5) to high-end performance (i7),[15] which correspond to three to five stars in Intel's Intel Processor Rating[16] as opposed to the entry-level Celeron (one star) and Pentium (two stars) processors.[17] Common features of all Nehalem based processors include an integrated DDR3 memory controller as well as QuickPath Interconnect or PCI Express and Direct Media Interface on the processor replacing the aging quad-pumped Front Side Bus used in all earlier Core processors. Also, all these processors have 256 KB L2 cache per core, plus up to 12 MB shared level 3 cache. Because of the new I/O interconnect, chipsets and mainboards from previous generations can no longer be used with Nehalem based processors. Core i3 The Core i3 was intended to be the new low end of the performance processor line from Intel, following the retirement of the Core 2 brand.[18][19] The first Core i3 processors were launched on January 7, 2010.[20] The first Nehalem based Core i3 was Clarkdale-based, with an integrated GPU and two cores.[21] The same processor is also available as Core i5 and Pentium, with slightly different configurations. The Core i3-3xxM processors are based on Arrandale, the mobile version of the Clarkdale desktop processor. They are similar to the Core i5-4xx series but running at lower clock speeds and without Turbo Boost.[22] According to an Intel FAQ they do not support Error Correction Code (ECC) memory.[23] According to motherboard manufacturer Supermicro, if a Core i3 processor is used with a server chipset platform such as Intel 3400/3420/3450, the CPU will support ECC with UDIMM.[24] When asked, Intel confirmed that, although the Intel 5 series chipset supports non-ECC memory only with the Core i5 or i3 processors, using those processors on a motherboard with 3400 series chipsets it will support the ECC function of ECC memory.[25] A limited number of motherboards by other companies also support ECC with Intel Core iX processors; the Asus P8B WS is an example, but it does not support ECC memory under Windows non-server operating systems.[26]You HAVE to have some information on that mobo? It should be a Supermicro. As far as I can tell, your non-ecc is the correct memory. Is the partity right? Check the docs before you screw around with ECC. No video is usually preceeded/accompanied with a bios memory test error, do you have memory test errors enabled in the bios? Is there beeping? -- Steven DuChene --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss -- (503) 754-4452 Android (623) 239-3392 Skype (623) 688-3392 Google Voice ** Safeway.com Automation Engineer --------------------------------------------------- PLUG-discuss mailing list - PLUG-discuss@lists.plug.phoenix.az.us To subscribe, unsubscribe, or to change your mail settings: http://lists.PLUG.phoenix.az.us/mailman/listinfo/plug-discuss