IBM PC XT 256K Memory - How Does It Work?

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The IBM PC XT technical reference indicates a maximum memory capacity of 256K on the motherboard, but the presence of 36 memory chip sockets suggests a more complex configuration. The motherboard originally supported 256K through four banks of 64K chips, while later models could accommodate up to 640K by utilizing expansion cards. A revision introduced in 1986 allowed the motherboard to support the full 640K with a different chip configuration. The discussion reveals that the board in question, with 27 UD61256 256K DRAM chips, could theoretically hold 864K, leading to confusion about its actual memory handling capabilities. Ultimately, it appears that the board could support 768K with parity, highlighting the nuanced evolution of memory configurations in the XT series.
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Hi All,

i was looking at the IBM PC XT technical reference and it states that the board can take a maximum of 256K of memory. If you look at the schematic you can then see 36 sockets for memory chips and if you see this picture of it

http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/de/1/11/PCXTMainboard01.jpg

You can see that the memory chips are ud61256 256k by 1 DRAM chips. How can the board support all these chips if the max it can handle is 256k?

Thanks
 
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640kB ought to be enough for anybody. If memory serves me well that was the limit for XT. Doesn't mean all were equipped with 640, early models (and/or cheap ones) had less.

Edit: taken from wikipedia:

There were two widely used configurations of the XT motherboard. The first could support up to 256kB on the motherboard itself (four banks of 64kB chips), with a maximum of 640kB achieved by using expansion cards. This was the configuration the XT originally shipped in. The second configuration - introduced in stock units in 1986 - could support the whole 640kB on the motherboard (two banks of 256kB chips, two banks of 64kB), had the later revision AT-compatible BIOS with a faster booting time, as well as support for 101-key keyboards and 3.5" floppy drives. The earlier configuration could be adapted to 'late' configuration after a couple of minor modifications.
 
Not sure you got what I am saying. Even if the max was 640kB , on the photo you can clearly see 27 chips each with 256Kbits of DRAM. This would amount to 6912Kbits in total and thus 864KB. From what I can see that board is equipped with more memory than it can handle, or I might be seeing it wrongly.
 
Yep, I misunderstood.
 
It's probably 768KB with parity. I don't recall if the memory map of the XT and what it allowed versus the AT.
 
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