The Memory Articles
- Live Memory Test: Overclock 'Em Till They Crash
- Tight Timings vs High Clock Frequencies
- Navigating the Memory Upgrade Jungle
- In Search of True DDR2 Bleeding Edge Memory
- How Much RAM Do You Really Need?
- The GeIL CL 1.5 DDR600 RAM Promise
- Pushing Your DDR2 RAM To The Max
- Separating The Wheat from the Chaff: The Latest DDR2 Modules Tested
- Corsair Reveals Xpert Memory Line: Speed with Sizzle
- Corsair In The Fast Lane: DDR2-667 and DDR400 With Extreme Timing
Game Results
7:20 AM - September 22, 2006 by
Sina Mohammadi
Source: Tom's Hardware US – Keywords: CORSAIR, XMS2, DOMINATOR
Syndication:
Source: Tom's Hardware US – Keywords: CORSAIR, XMS2, DOMINATOR
Syndication:
Table of Contents:
Game Results
F.E.A.R

We can see that the enthusiast and generic DDR2-800 modules have identical results and that the overclocked and much higher frequency DDR2-1123 has only a marginal effect on F.E.A.R. performance. This is because most games depend more on a fast graphics solution and a decent processor than on highest performing memory.
Video Encoding Results
Divx 6.25

Xvid 1.2

The performance gains of high end enthusiast memory can be seen in applications such as video encoding, which rely heavily on the memory bandwidth. In these results we can see that the tighter timings of the Corsair DDR2-800 module results in a 3% performance gain and the higher frequency of the Corsair DDR2-1123 module gives it an 8% gain over the generic equivilant DDR2-800 module.
Audio Benchmark Results
Lame 3.97.1 MP3 Encoding

- Previous page Dominator Types
- Next page Ogg Vorbis Audio Encoding