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#51 | ||
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I'm no expert, so i am legitimately asking why this hasn't been recommended http://guides.macrumors.com/Testing_RAM Last edited by Phrygian; Jan 5, 2013 at 09:34 PM. |
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#52 |
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Seems like pulling the suspect RAM is a lot quicker.
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Wait a second... So you're telling me anything that happens in the sky is legal, and there's a giant crime-blimp flying around this place? I don't know how I missed that. |
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#53 |
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From what I can tell, I've been told I can't mixed 8GB DIMMs with other sizes; since the OP has 8GB DIMMs mixed with 2GB DIMMs, that could be the culprit.
Then again, the last time my computer had these symptom, I found out one of my processors had gone back and thankfully that was right before my AppleCare ran out!
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Mac Pro | 27" iMac | 15" MacBook Pro with Retina display | iPhone 5 | iPad 3 | iPad mini
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#54 |
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I'd run a memtest first if it hasn't already been done, however....
Couple of things: - Some models of OCZ SSDs have up to 30% failure rate vs sub 5% for almost every other brand on the market. I believe the Agility of some description was listed in a survey I read recently as being up above 29% failure rate. - I personally know of several people who have had huge problems with blue screens and other stability issues with OCZ SSDs ("failure" rate above is considered as in-warranty return to vendor) You'll need to verify what hardware is faulty vs process of elimination. I'd suspect the OCZ drive as the likely culprit - try and remove that first. It could be RAM too, but the OCZ drives have a well deserved reputation for appalling failure rate. Mixed RAM, so long as it is in spec and not faulty should not cause those issues, so long as group within a channel is matched. I'm not aware of how the channels in the Mac Pro are set up. Quickest way to diagnose may be to go back to factory apple spec and add the aftermarket bits one by one until the problems re-occur.
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MBP (early 2011) - Core i7 2720 2.2ghz, Hires Glossy, 16GB, Seagate Momentus XT 750GB Mac Mini (mid 2007) - Core2 Duo 1.8, 2gb, 320gb 7200 rpm iPhone 4S, iPad 4 Last edited by throAU; Jan 5, 2013 at 10:38 PM. |
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#55 |
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I don't know where you got the 30% statistic from, but I've used a dozen or so OCZ SSDs (installed on a few computers for myself and friends). I've never had an issue. Firmware updates are easy and support is good.
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Mac Pro | 27" iMac | 15" MacBook Pro with Retina display | iPhone 5 | iPad 3 | iPad mini
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#56 | |
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http://www.behardware.com/articles/8...s-rates-7.html edit: My bad, the agility isn't one of the worst on there, but up to 40% failure rate for some OCZ models. Buyer beware, etc. All i'm saying is SSD certainly can cause stability issues - and OCZ are the most commonly faulty on the market - with Intel and Samsung being the most reliable - by a factor of 10x vs. OCZ overall and up to 80x some of the OCZ models. If you've got a good OCZ you're happy with, awesome. But if i had to point my finger at a likely culprit for hardware fault diagnosis, i'd look long and hard at any OCZ device in the picture - as those stats seem to indicate an inherent problem with OCZ reliability.
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MBP (early 2011) - Core i7 2720 2.2ghz, Hires Glossy, 16GB, Seagate Momentus XT 750GB Mac Mini (mid 2007) - Core2 Duo 1.8, 2gb, 320gb 7200 rpm iPhone 4S, iPad 4 Last edited by throAU; Jan 5, 2013 at 10:46 PM. |
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#57 | |
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Frankly, with Samsung, crucial and intel all producing solid, reliable and nearly equally priced products, I just figure stay away from OCZ given some of the poor reports on the quality. |
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MBP 8,2 15" 2.2Ghz w/ 120GB SSD + 500GB MBA 4,2 13" 1.7Ghz w/ 128GB SSD Mac Mini 6,2 2.3ghz w/ 240GB SSD + 1TB Mac Pro 1,1 w/ 8 cores @ 2.66 w/ 240GB SSD |
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#59 | |
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You have then located the dodgy pair of sticks (the last pair you installed). Rip all the ram out again, install one stick of the faulty pair, and run memtest. If it passes, it is the remaining stick. Dodgy memory will generally fail pretty quickly - no need to run the test for days or anything, so long as it has passed all tests you can be reasonably confident it is good.
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MBP (early 2011) - Core i7 2720 2.2ghz, Hires Glossy, 16GB, Seagate Momentus XT 750GB Mac Mini (mid 2007) - Core2 Duo 1.8, 2gb, 320gb 7200 rpm iPhone 4S, iPad 4 |
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#60 |
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I've got 3 or 4 different RAM brands in my Mac Pro 3,1 without having any issue for years...
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Mactua.eu | The latest Apple related news! |
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#61 |
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So do I in all my Mac's it's not the best solution, but they don't have problems. When your computer has issues you eliminate variables mixed ram is one of them.
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Mac Pro|W3570|48GB|GTX 570|Agility3 +15TB|30"ACD 17" MacBook Pro|2.8|8GB|240GB Vertex + |
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#62 |
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#63 |
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Try a clean install of the OS.
There's no way a C2D iMac should be outperforming a 12Core Mac Pro. It may boot faster because there's less ram to verify, but that's about it. Original Poster, how did you migrate the data from your iMac to the Mac Pro? |
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#64 | |
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I used migration assistant and transferred over literally everything to the mac pro. however, im getting a geekbench score of 20,000 so it seems like the computer is running at its fastest? if my computer was not running right would that number be that high? or is that totally irrelevant? |
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