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Also tested this but with success.non ECC ram will not work in a ECC spec syno. Tested it myself.
I see, good to know thanks. Still I see they're both "Single Rank" according to Kingston here.Actually I bought 2 of those, to make 32MB.
Before I decide I have a question, doesn't the 1621+ require "Dual Rank" memory only, so how are some here installing odd sizes and odd manu's sticks?
{"success":1,"list":[{"model_number":"RAM1600DDR3L-4GBx2","recommend":true},{"model_number":"RAM1600DDR3L-8GBx2","recommend":true}],"nas_model":"ds1517+"}
Thanks for the info, looks like its not cut-n-dry so, great more research needed and that's before the non-ECC vs ECC debate!Before we get lost in the permutations of experience vs specifications vs artificial vendor lock it is worth reading back a little to find that the vendor check is currently running inconsistently. It only runs at cold boot too, so whatever people are running it may take many months before the memory warning comes up.
For some the warning will never 'display' as they don't have that notification set in DSM - but when detected it will be recorded and if found give problems when it comes to tech support and warranty.
Dual-rank memory is a physical form-factor not to confused with dual-channel, where identical pairs of sticks are run together for increased memory bandwidth. Synology has pushed the idea that dual-rank should only be used for 2666MT/s and above for stability. Maybe this was once true where 2666 was the new memory on the block, but it isn't a thing now yet Synology sticks with it out of habit.
From this bit onwards I will stick with how the Synology vendor-lock works which has little to do with the physical system's technical requirements. We have to call it for what it is - anticompetitive behaviour of the sort that breeches UK and EU law that unfairly targets other vendors of what is a commodity part.
As to specifics, the Synology code deliberately targets and blacklists by name any memory made by Kingston, Transcend and a few others, now and forever.
Synology also blacklists any single-rank memory at 2666MT/s and above, but as Synology 'makes' 2 DRAM modules that are single-rank and run at 2666 there are 2 specified exceptions. Incidentally those 2 exceptions are actually made by 2 different OEMs that would otherwise be blacklisted. Go figure.
One of the other locks circles back to 2666MT/s memory. If it is above or below 2666MT/s it will be flagged. This is despite the fact that faster memory will always run at a lower speed and that the Ryzen CPU is capped at 2400MT/s. So Synology's 2666MT/s is running down-clocked at 2400MT/s and Synology's own (older) 2400MT/s RAM will also trigger the vendor lock.
Presumably Synology is banking on customer inertia and their small scale to avoid a court case.
It was not always this way, using my DS1517+ as an example, the memory compatibility settings were very simple, albeit they did dip a toe in the water by setting an artificial max RAM limit of 16GB:
{"success":1,"list":[{"model_number":"RAM1600DDR3L-4GBx2","recommend":true},{"model_number":"RAM1600DDR3L-8GBx2","recommend":true}],"nas_model":"ds1517+"}
Before we get lost in the permutations of experience vs specifications vs artificial vendor lock it is worth reading back a little to find that the vendor check is currently running inconsistently. It only runs at cold boot too, so whatever people are running it may take many months before the memory warning comes up.
For some the warning will never 'display' as they don't have that notification set in DSM - but when detected it will be recorded and if found give problems when it comes to tech support and warranty.
So Synology's 2666MT/s is running down-clocked at 2400MT/s and Synology's own (older) 2400MT/s RAM will also trigger the vendor lock.
Muddying always appreciated if knowledge improved wihich as a retired I.T. manager saved my bacon many a time, let me tell you.Just to muddy the waters a bit .. I'm running with 20gb ... I replaced one of the 4g that came with the DS1621+ with a 16gb module and it has no issues. The chip I bought is linked below. It is a dual-rank chip
Arch Memory Replacement for Synology D4ECSO-2666-16G 16 GB DDR4-2666 PC4-21300 260-Pin ECC So-dimm RAM: Amazon.ca: Electronics
Arch Memory Replacement for Synology D4ECSO-2666-16G 16 GB DDR4-2666 PC4-21300 260-Pin ECC So-dimm RAM: Amazon.ca: Electronicswww.amazon.ca
I would stay away from Crucial ... I *always* get the warning with the 16gb Crucial I have in an older NAS.
{"model_number":"Blacklist","recommend":true,"manufacturer":"[\"Kingston\",\"Transcend\",\"0198\",\"014F\"]"}
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