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#1 2007-04-10 19:55:50

Pingu
Member
Registered: 2007-04-07
Posts: 7

Replacing the RAM of your 323

Hi

I'm thinking about "replacing" the RAM with 2x64MB or more if I can find :-)
Any thoughts on this before I totally lose my warranty?

Pingu

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#2 2007-04-11 00:18:56

someguy
Member
Registered: 2007-01-17
Posts: 47

Re: Replacing the RAM of your 323

That would be really nice if you're successful (and it's not too difficult)!  I wonder:
a) benchmark impact.. on file transfer and on applications..
b) new applications it would make viable..
If d-link made these device easily upgradeable, (and added at least one more gig-ethernet port so this could act as a router, too : )), I think they'd sell zillions..

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#3 2007-04-11 00:50:58

kimhav
Member
From: Klagshamn, Sweden
Registered: 2007-01-08
Posts: 56
Website

Re: Replacing the RAM of your 323

Pingu wrote:

Hi

I'm thinking about "replacing" the RAM with 2x64MB or more if I can find :-)
Any thoughts on this before I totally lose my warranty?

Pingu

Curious, but how would you replace the RAM, since they are solder to the board?


Kim Haverblad
Klagshamn, Sweden
http://kim.haverblad.se

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#4 2007-04-11 04:08:14

someguy
Member
Registered: 2007-01-17
Posts: 47

Re: Replacing the RAM of your 323

yes, I was wondering what @pingu was wondering..
The DNS-323 comes with:
2x 32 MB Nanya NT5DS16M16CS-6K
You can see one here:
http://dns323.kood.org/_media/11.jpg?cache=cache
.. and the other on the other side, here:
http://dns323.kood.org/_detail/18.jpg?i … ache=cache

specs here: http://www.nanoamp.com/datasheets/NT5DS16M16.pdf

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#5 2007-04-11 13:54:39

nicko
Member
Registered: 2007-03-17
Posts: 45

Re: Replacing the RAM of your 323

Pingu wrote:

I'm thinking about "replacing" the RAM with 2x64MB or more if I can find :-)

Uh huh

Pingu wrote:

Any thoughts on this before I totally lose my warranty?

Yup. Don't.

Speaking as an EE who has used more than a bit of SMT stuff in their time and has a fully equipped lab with all the correct, very expensive,  SMT rework tools, I wouldn't attempt this. There are many many reasons why just replacing the chips with higher capacity ones would fail.

First question is: "Why bother"? If the answer is "I want to brick my DNS", then do it.

Nick

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