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Crucial RAM 8GB DDR3 1600 MHz CL11 Laptop Memory CT102464BF160B

  • Based on 46,550 reviews
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Availability: Only 2 left in stock, order soon!
Fulfilled by MemoryMasters

Arrives Saturday, Mar 7
Order within 8 hours and 38 minutes
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Size: 8GB


Style: Memory


Features

  • Improve your system's responsiveness, run apps faster and multitask with ease
  • Install with ease; no computer skills required; How-to guides available at Crucial
  • Compatibility assurance when using the Crucial System Scanner or Crucial Advisor Tool
  • Micron quality and reliability is backed by superior component and module level testing and 42 years of memory expertise
  • ECC Type = Non-ECC, Form Factor = SODIMM, Pin Count = 204-pin, PC Speed = PC3-12800, Voltage = 1.35V/1.5V, Rank and Configuration = 2Rx8

Description

CT102464BF160B is a single 8GB DDR3L 1.35V Notebook module that operates at speeds up to 1600 MT/s and has a CL11 latency. It is dual voltage and can operate at 1.35V or 1.5V. It is Unbuffered and is non-ECC. It conforms to the industry standard SODIMM layout of 204 pins and is compatible with computers that take DDR3L SODIMM memory.


RAM: ‎8 GB DDR3L 1600^SODIMM


Memory Speed: ‎1600 MHz


Brand: ‎Crucial


Series: ‎Crucial DDR3/DDR3L 1600 MT/s SODIMM Memory


Item model number: ‎CT102464BF160B


Item Weight: ‎0.32 ounces


Product Dimensions: ‎2.87 x 1.18 x 0.08 inches


Item Dimensions LxWxH: ‎2.87 x 1.18 x 0.08 inches


Color: ‎Multi-Colour


Processor Count: ‎1


Computer Memory Type: ‎SODIMM


Flash Memory Size: ‎8


Voltage: ‎1.35 Volts


Manufacturer: ‎CRUCIAL TECHNOLOGY


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: ‎No


Date First Available: ‎November 1, 2004


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Saturday, Mar 7

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • Great upgrade for Lenovo Y410P, HP Chromebox. CT2K8G3S160BM/CT2C8G3S160BM and CT2KIT102464BF160B/CT2CP102464BF160B are identical
Size: 16GB kit (8GBx2) Style: Memory
I purchased the Crucial CT2K8G3S160BM 2x8GB to increase the memory in my Lenovo Y410P laptop from 8-GB to 16-GB. My Y410P has two memory slots, and one slot was already occupied by a factory-installed Samsung M471B1G73QH0-YK0 8-GB memory card. I probably could have just added another 8-GB card. But to avoid any possible memory glitches, I prefer not to mix-and-match memory cards of different types. The existing Samsung memory was PC3L/DDR3L, with the 'L' signifying that it is low-voltage 1.35V memory, whereas the standard PC3/DDR3 memory uses a higher voltage of 1.50V. You should not combine memory of different voltages or use memory with incorrect voltage since your laptop may not even boot up. To further maximize compatibility with my laptop, since it came equipped with CL11 1600-MHz memory, I likewise wanted to stick with CL11 CAS Latency speed, instead of going for memory with a faster (lower) CL rating. Some CL9 memory cards have faster specifications, but I really think that most people will not notice 2-nanoseconds of extra latency. So I ordered this CL11 1600-MHz memory because I wanted to exactly match the specifications of my laptop's original 8-GB memory card to ensure compatibility since using mismatched memory can cause system instability. And this memory has been working flawlessly in my laptop! In real-world applications benchmarks, there is barely any difference between using CL11 memory and using some fancier CL9 memory, and the unnoticeable speed difference is not worth paying extra money for more-expensive models of CL9 or faster memory. With most applications, if you compare CL7, CL9, and CL11 application benchmarks, the differences mostly amount to 2% to 4% differences in benchmark timings. Along with the CL listing, another important memory performance indicator is bandwidth, and this Crucial memory's DDR3 1600MHz has a very good maximum bandwidth of 12800MB/s. But what does this mean in real-world performance terms? Relatively little. As long as you have enough memory to hold the applications that you are running without paging, RAM speed is only very rarely a performance bottleneck. Even with quad-core CPUs, the bottleneck is more likely still going to be the CPU . The reason for this is that the CPU's branch prediction algorithms are so accurate that, in the vast majority of circumstances, the data is already in the cache when the CPU needs it. So direct calls to RAM are quite rare. The branch predictor is like the CPU's personal assistant; it guesses what piece of information the boss needs next and makes sure it is already on his desk by the time he needs it. Occasionally, the assistant will get it wrong and the boss will have to forage around and find the information himself. In CPU terms, "foraging around" means retrieving the information from RAM, or (worst case scenario) disk, while if it is "on the boss' desk", that is equivalent to it being in the CPU's cache. And if your computer is equipped with an SSD using Intel's "Smart Response Technology" or if your computer uses SSDs instead of hard disks, it may retrieve the data from the speedy SSD instead of reading from a slower hard disk. So the days are long-gone when purchasing high-end expensive RAM actually makes a tangible difference to your computer's performance. As long as it meets the basic specifications that your chipset requires, there is not much to be gained by paying more. Some performance gains are possible from buying better RAM, but these days, most tests tend to show that such performance gains are minimal... far, far lower than you will get from adding more RAM (not necessarily faster RAM, just *more* RAM) or a faster CPU. This was not always the case. When the Pentium IV first came out thirteen years ago, it used a new type of RAM that had, at the time, very high bandwidth, but also very high latency. AMD's Athlon used traditional RAM with lower bandwidth and lower latency. Some types of applications (e.g. video and audio conversion) were very sensitive to bandwidth, but less sensitive to latency. These types of applications showed significant performance gains with the Pentium IV. Other applications (typically games and office applications) were more sensitive to latency and favored the Athlon. Overall, this Crucial memory is a great buy! Don't overspend on memory just because a brand or model of memory touts better specifications. If you are a hardcore computer gamer with a $4000 gaming laptop, you may opt for faster high-end memory to complement your top-of-the-line CPU and graphics. But most people should focus far more on how compatible that memory's specifications are for your system because the differences between CL ratings are negligible if you are considering CL rating differences of 2 or 3, while using memory that is not correctly matched or compatible with your computer can cause a variety of problems. After I removed the original Samsung 8-GB memory from my Y410P laptop and added these two Crucial SODIMM cards, I reran the Windows Experience Index benchmark and got the same WEI "Memory operations per second" score of 8.1 that I had with the Samsung memory. The WEI "Processor: Calculations per second" also remained unchanged at 8.1. This was not surprising considering that both the original Samsung memory and this Crucial memory have the same specifications. I also purchased a single 8GB card of this same Crucial memory to upgrade my HP Chromebox, which comes equipped with only 2GB in its single memory slot. There is a lot of misleading information on the Internet stating the maximum memory that you can use in the HP Chromebox is 4GB. But that is incorrect since the HP Chromebox can fully use 8GB of memory. After I upgraded my HP Chromebox, the Memory Monitor app on its Chrome OS displayed the memory capacity as 7.9GB. 2GB of memory is sufficient for a Chromebook/Chromebox if you are just browsing with a few tabs open. But if you want to open up lots of tabs and run lots of apps, or if you plan to install Linux or Windows on your Chromebook/Chromebox, then adding more memory will help with performance. Note that Crucial has two identical 16-GB 2x8GB kits with identical specifications, with each memory product having two different part numbers: CT2K8G3S160BM/CT2C8G3S160BM Crucial 16GB Kit (8GBx2) DDR3 1600 MHz (PC3-12800) CL11 SODIMM 204-Pin 1.35V/1.5V Mac Memory CT2K8G3S160BM , and CT2KIT102464BF160B/CT2CP102464BF160B Crucial 16GB Kit (8GBx2) DDR3 1600 MT/s (PC3-12800) CL11 SODIMM 204-Pin 1.35V/1.5V Notebook Memory CT2KIT102464BF160B . CT2K8G3S160BM/CT2C8G3S160BM and CT2KIT102464BF160B/CT2CP102464BF160B are exactly the same memory cards, with the only difference being that the CT2K8G3S160BM/CT2C8G3S160BM product is packaged for Macs with the words "Mac Compatible" on the package. But all four of these part numbers are totally interchangeable because they contain identical memory cards. So if you determine that this is the right memory for your computer, just get whichever of these four Crucial part numbers is cheapest :-) I purchased the CT2K8G3S160BM/CT2C8G3S160BM on Amazon because it was $30 cheaper than the CT2KIT102464BF160B/CT2CP102464BF160B product listing at the time (of course, prices can vary each day). Both of these products are dual-voltage and can work in either 1.35V PC3L/DDR3L or 1.50V PC3/DDR3 memory slots. Both products are Mac-compatible, but they are also not Mac-specific or PC-specific, and they work equally well with PCs, Macs, and Chromebook/Chromebox. [...]. If you have questions, please ask. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 31, 2014 by AmazonCustomer

  • Worked great on my Synology 1019+
Size: 16GB kit (8GBx2) Style: Memory
I saw all the reviews and technical write up for this memory. It said it will work on my Synology 1019+ and it did. Works great.
Reviewed in the United States on December 1, 2022 by Craig Solow

  • Funciono perfectamente
Size: 8GB Style: Memory
Trabaja correctamente con mi equipo Lenovo
Reviewed in the United States on November 25, 2022 by Milton GN

  • Much faster
Size: 8GB KIT (4GBx2) Style: Memory
Works as advertised.
Reviewed in the United States on November 16, 2022 by Mike

  • good product fast service
Size: 8GB Style: Memory
Excellent service, product work as advertised. No problem
Reviewed in the United States on October 30, 2022 by R. J. Zee

  • A Crucial Upgrade For an Old Macbook
Size: 8GB KIT (4GBx2) Style: Memory
My wife's Macbook Pro is getting pretty old now, and she's been complaining that it's "slow". So went through the startup processes and installed apps and removed everything she isn't using, then bought this memory upgrade. Generally speaking, Ram is either good or not. In my I.T. career I have heard of "bad ram" that causes reboots, corruption, etc, but this rarely the case where someone would notice it (more often a system just becomes "unstable" and needs to be rebooted more often or locks up/reboots once in a while). If someone is really paranoid they can use ram with Error Correction for a server (used for critical applications where errors are catastrophic), and/or test the ram to make sure it doesn't have any diagnostic errors. But in general, ram is ram and if it works it works. There's no moving parts so if you encounter issues it's far more likely to be the wrong product or poor installation than a bad piece of hardware unless you are buying from a vendor that does not test their product before shipment or knowingly is selling you bad product. That said... Installation is dead simple for my wife's old Macbook. Remove screws. Push in tabs to pop out old ram. Install new ram by pushing pins into slot firmly and pushing down to swing arm into place and lock ram. Turn on to make sure no ram error on boot and all ram recognized. Turn off and screw back panel back on. Done! All ram recognized, no errors (so far) and large applications load faster. I think my wife will really (not) notice the difference with large applications and files. In other words if she's running several apps at once and/or working with images she WON'T notice chugging and slowdown. So yes, if you have an old machine that doesn't come with 8gb of ram already, this is a good upgrade. I don't recommend upgrading to more ram than that for most people since they won't notice the difference once there's enough for all OS files to load into ram and apps to load into ram without disk swapping (paging). Beyond that you will generally know if you need more ram because you'll be a professional working with ram images, 3D editing, video editing, or something else that requires more ram to function. Interestingly most games will never require a high amount of ram unless you are running at very high resolutions (4K, etc) so leave the bigger ram upgrades to the professionals and install this upgrade to 8gb for everyday use. 4gb is too low to run a modern operation system smoothly without slowdown. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 11, 2021 by Strategos

  • My HP notebook became much faster. No more paging
Size: 16GB kit (8GBx2) Style: Memory
My HP came with 6GB RAM windows 10 64bit. I used it for a few years it started becoming slower and would freeze. I was on the verge of getting rid of it after it sat for 2 years unused. It was slow and was always paging files. Before giving it up I saw the prices of crucial memory and ssd drives had dropped. I decided to do memory upgrade first. I realized they made it hard to upgrade the laptop but I succeeded. The notebook become much more responsive and startup time was about a minute. After upgrading the disk to ssd my startup times rarely take longer than 10 secs. I am using it to type this review. This is how the notebook should have come from factory. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on August 9, 2022 by Eric

  • Memorias nuevas, muy agradecido
Size: 8GB Style: Memory
Necesitaba estás memorias, tenía limitaciones con la poca memoria que tenía antes. Ahora mi ordenado con las nuevas memorias abren más programas y juegos. Misma frecuencia y latencia con mi ordenado. Saludos a los fabricantes.
Reviewed in the United States on September 22, 2022 by Sergio

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