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Check the memory tab and see if it says 2 x 64-bit by channel count.
The rank count in the SPD tab will always reflect the same thing, as it is dependent upon the actual arrangement of parts on the individual RAM module itself and not the arrangement of where you place them on the motherboard.
so, in channel count, 2x 64-bit is what i want to look for ?
and freq x2 = ddr speed
spd tab is for checking the stats of each dimm
Edit: or maybe not actually.
Just benchmark to see if you are only getting single channel. The score should make it obvious.
This should indicate its dual sided non-ECC. 72bit would indicate its normal ECC.
@OP, would help if you posted which motherboard you have and what memory model. No one can tell you what your motherboard supports if we don't know what motherboard you're talking about.
I’m not sure how single or double sided, or ecc fits into any of this but it’s certainly not related to “2x64bit” !!
Ohhhh, @Illusion of Progress do you have a 2nd gen Ryzen? I forgot that Zen+ had that "quirk" because of those chiplet designs. Those generation of Ryzen CPU which had 2x CCXs don't have a normal "dual channel" memory controller. They have 2x dual channel memory controllers which each operate in single channel with 1 channel from each CCX that act as a single dual channel IMC. This tried to help make the memory access have a better chance of not having the latency penalty of having to go across to the second CCX for all memory access. That might be what CPUz is referencing with that in the "Channel #" field.
Integrated Memory Controller
Max Type: DDR4-2933
Supports ECC: Yes
Max Mem: 64 GiB
Controllers: 2
Channels: 2
Max Bandwidth: 43.71 GiB/s
Bandwidth: Single 21.86 GiB/s Double 43.71 GiB/s
On 2nd gen Ryzen Threadripper both channels on one CCD and both channels on the second CCD operated in tandem to work as a Quad channel IMC. The exception to this was the 2990wx which had all 4x CCDs and had 2x of the CCDs memory controllers disabled so it would still operate as a quad channel IMC.
I might be mistaken, but I thought CPU-Z used to show just "single" and "dual" for the channel, but it shows "2 x 64-bit" in the channel field now with v2.0.0, so I presumed CPU-Z may have ust changed how it showed this it in recent versions (since I've seen dual channel reflected as 128-bit before). I might be wrong since I don't check CPU-Z often though.
Mystery. That's odd, I just updated to 2.00 and its still showing mine as Quad.