By following this guide, you can decode Micron part numbers with confidence and work more efficiently with their memory products.
If you have the full part number, you can use the Serial Presence-Detect (SPD) Tool to find detailed JEDEC-standard technical specs. 3. Breaking Down a Micron Part Number (MPN) micron memory part number decoder
| Position | Characters | Meaning | Decoded value | |----------|------------|---------|----------------| | 1-2 | MT | Manufacturer | | | 3-4 | 40 | Family | DDR4 SDRAM (40 = DDR4, 41 = DDR3, 42 = DDR5, etc.) | | 5 | A | Die revision | Rev A (silicon mask version) | | 6 | 1G | Density | 1 Gb (gigabit) – Note: 1G = 1 gigabit, not gigabyte | | 8-9 | 16 | Organization | x16 (16 data I/O pins) – options: x4, x8, x16 | | 10-11 | RC | Package & FBGA code | RC = 78-ball FBGA, lead-free, halogen-free | | 12 | - | Separator | Just a dash | | 13-15 | 062 | Speed grade | 062 = 1.6 ns = 1250 Mbps (DDR4-1600? Wait, careful: 062 actually means 0.625 ns? Let’s check — for DDR4, 062E means tCK=0.625ns → 1600 MT/s. Yes.) | | 16 | E | Temperature & grade | E = Extended temperature (-25°C to 95°C) – T=Industrial, C=Commercial | | 17 | : | Separator | Colon | | 18 | B | Stepping | B = Component revision (like firmware for hardware) | By following this guide, you can decode Micron