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There are lots of i7 motherboards that support 64GB memory, and even one that supports 128GB: http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16813130681
But I read that i7 CPUs can't access more than 32GB of memory on some forums. Is this true?
If so, then what's the point of those motherboards?
Do you know the earliest i7 model that can use 64GB memory? Or is this out of reach of the latest i7 model we have now? – Joan Venge – 2013-12-23T19:17:10.373
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This one i7 3970 is the oldest one I found which supports 64GiB. Though some of the later model have a lesser maximum on Intels site. I am not sure if there is a clear method here or if it depends per CPU model. [Edit:] user2196728's reference is a full quarter older than the one I just linked to.
– Hennes – 2013-12-23T19:36:04.383Thanks which one is the user21's reference? I did some digging and found similar stuff as you. Like you said there is no method for this I guess. I definitely couldn't see an i7 that supports 128GB though. Not being familiar with the current models, I am not 100%, but pretty sure. Do you know if the newer generation haswell will support 128GBs? Either way 64GB with mobo and CPU comes to $2000, which seems a lot for an upgrade. I will probably wait next year to do so. – Joan Venge – 2013-12-23T19:55:15.803
1There is no sane economic reason to build consumer CPU's with pins for more memory than 99% of its users will use. This you will find that most CPUs do not support more memory than most of its users will ever need. In the case of an i7 the users are standard home and office users. In the case of servers this is different and for these the Xeon range of CPU are made. (That is, for Intel. AMD also has its own range of server CPU's). Usually these Xeons are based on the latest CPU's, though they sometimes lag a generation. – Hennes – 2013-12-23T20:37:43.933
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They also come with more testing, often with more cores and with a higher max. RAM. Example this i7 based Xeon with 384GiB supported memory per CPU (so double that if you use 2 CPUs on a workstation or on a server motherboard.)
– Hennes – 2013-12-23T20:38:02.513