I said this in my initial reply to you.Ģ) RAM is RAM, at least in the vast majority of cases. You're kind of all over the place here, so I'll break things down a bit:ġ) 1600 MHz RAM works fine in the 2011 MacBook Pro, but it provides no tangible benefit for everyday use. even for a 1333MHz, what latency do I buy? Can any of them be trouble for a Mac? but what does that mean for MBP? Will it work, or clock down? I'd normally agree with you, but Apple support would also say that my MBP supports up to 8GB, when in fact the Intel chipset supports 16GB (in fact, up to 32GB). I conducted this experiment in my 2010 MBP by installing RAM from my late 2011 MBP and verified the result. ![]() No advantage is gained in installing RAM that has a higher clock speed than what the given MBP is designed for. ![]() Or can cheap RAM, provided you're lucky and get one without faults, be just as good? (In other words, is it all about quality assurance?)Īpple support says that RAM with a higher frequency when installed in a MBP designed to run at a lower rate, will down clock the the RAM to the level of the MBP design parameters. So what about 1333MHz vs 1600MHz - will the high frequency increase potential stability and failure rates noticeably?Īlso, does branded/expensive RAM reduce these?
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