Posted 1/23/2006 2:31 AM | | | First question, what are the advantages of dv over normal?
Second, I understand that a dv will work in a unit that is made for normal. In my 3230 on the memory card slot it has little rails and connectors that are outside of the normal rsmmc, I've read that other people's 3230 didn't have these, so has anyone heard anything about nokia changing the spec? It has 9 little connectors whereas my 7610 has 7.
I have route 66 mobile 7 (sat nav) which is for the 3230, amongst others and that comes with a dv card (which was fried) I've been able to put the software on my normal card, altho it seems a litle juddery and I'm wondering if thats because a dv card runs faster or something? |
| Posted 1/23/2006 2:59 PM | | | a DV card just means it can run at a lower voltage. MMCmobile (part of the MMCA 4.1 spec) memory cards have a faster, wider bus, of 13pins. This is capable of theoretical speeds of up to 52MB p/s, but realistically, you can expect up to 8MB p/s real transfer speeds from the best brands right now. i doubt your Nokia 3230 has a 13pin bus so i do not believe it will make a difference on that side of things, and we believe the 3230 runs at standard RSMMC voltage rather than the lower voltage, unless Nokia introduced a hardware version change since the early releases. hope that helps cheers
 Webmaster www.MobyMemory.com London, UK |
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