All about Memory
 Latest Memory articles
All Memory articles

Newsletters


  • Ask your question about IT issues
  • Post

Partners

The Games selection

crazy : PC Breakdown What is worst than a Fatal Error occuring during a game you did not save? Unleash your rage at your PC in this game. Blow it to pieces, it feels so...
kids : Bob Throw bubbles so as to make the ones that appear in the game disappear. For this, use the Right / Left arrow keys to duck or move about, and the...
Ads

Sponsored links

Test Setup

Previous Next
3:20 AM - 12/01/2008 by Thomas Soderstrom

We tested every module pair using the following components:

Test Configuration
Component Base Settings
CPU Intel Core 2 Duo E8600, (3.33 GHz, 6.0 MB Cache)
Overclocked to 4.00 GHz, FSB-1600
Motherboard Asus P5Q Deluxe Rev 1.03G
P45 Express Chipset, BIOS 1406 (10/07/2008)
Graphics Gigabyte GV-R487-512H-B
HD 4870 GPU (750 MHz), GDDR5-3600
Hard Drive Western Digital WD5000AAKS, 500 GB
7,200 RPM, SATA 3 Gb/s, 16 MB cache
Sound Integrated HD Audio
Network Integrated Gigabit Networking
Power Coolermaster RS850-EMBA (850W, ATX12V v2.2)
Software and Drivers
Operating System Windows Vista Ultimate SP1
Graphics Driver ATI Catalyst 8.9
Onboard Device Drivers Motherboard Driver DVD

Notice that we overclocked our motherboard and processor to FSB-1,600. A combination of this setting and the “400 MHz Boot Strap” allowed us to test our modules at 800, 1066, and 1200 MHz data rates without changing CPU speed. Configuring FSB-1,600 was easy with the overclock-friendly Core 2 Duo E8600 processor, as the resulting 4.00 GHz clock speed accelerated testing without incurring instability.

Because modules that use the same capacity, speed, and timings have identical performance, today’s tests will concentrate solely on the capabilities of each module to achieve high frequencies and/or low latencies at various voltage levels. We used MemTest86 v1.70 to verify stability for each setting.

Talkback
randomizer 12/01/2008 10:26 AM
Hide
-2+

Good to see G.Skill finally decided to send some samples.

JonnyDough 12/01/2008 11:04 AM
Hide
-0+

You can increase how much ram is used for prefetch in XP as well, so that hardly says that Vista is faster than XP once you use more RAM. I for one have skipped the Vista era and am happily awaiting Windows 7. I guess I prefer to keep my $100 in my wallet for awhile instead of giving it to M$ investors.

V3NOM 12/01/2008 11:08 AM
Hide
-3+

i rofl'd that my cheap Team Elite owned all of them except the ballistix...

JonnyDough 12/01/2008 11:08 AM
Hide
-10+

Stop using rebates as qualifiers. I was taught in consumer math that if you purchase something with the cost of a rebate figured in, you had better be prepared to pay full price. I think a lot of us here IGNORE rebate pricing, and won't even support it by buying rebated items. Rebates are CRAP, no consumer likes them. They aren't a "discount" they are a marketing ploy to rip people off.

raider37 12/01/2008 11:09 AM
Hide
-2+

I'm pretty darn happy with my 4GB of XMS2 DDR2-800 RAM from Corsair, all my components are overclocked and work extremely well, plus here in Pakistan only 2 memory companies are widely available (Kingston and corsair) and we all know kingston is overpriced and their modules do not perform as well as Corsairs.

johnbilicki 12/01/2008 11:39 AM
Show
Crashman 12/01/2008 12:22 PM
Hide
-7+

johnbilicki :
As a regular I feel insulted that my fellow readers and I are expected to except an introduction suggesting that we are mindless consumers no different than the people who trampled and killed a worker at Walmart this past Friday.



That sounds like the voice of experience...you were at that Wal Mart? Because it appears that everyone else automatically knew that the introduction was meant to cover the widest range of potential buyers, and not each one of them specifically. Yet you mindlessly trampled into that rant?

johnbilicki 12/01/2008 12:31 PM
Show
Crashman 12/01/2008 12:50 PM
Hide
-6+

johnbilicki :
The introduction slaps everyone in the face by suggesting money is the only solution. Even less experienced people know how to do a Google query."The power of accurate observation is commonly called cynicism by those who haven't got it." - George Bernard Shaw



It suggests that very little money can be a very easy solution to multiple performance issues.

And you're using a quote to emphasise your cynicism concerning my observation? Thanks!

johnbilicki 12/01/2008 1:19 PM
Show
Tjik 12/01/2008 2:27 PM
Hide
--3+

OK, so this is one of those articles that has no value at all outside of the US. In my view it's kind of pointless to make such a twisted calculation that puts everything upside down, with conclusions that might be worth zero tomorrow. If it's true that G.Skill hasn'tbeen very keen on sending some RAM for testing I think this article won't make them more willing to.

Offer easy to understand figures and don't promote any rebate schemes. A consumer isn't more stupid than that he's able to figure out that it might be a good idea to check what special offers are available at the day of the buy. Or is this article to be updated on a regular basis until the next big round-up? Rebates aren't some kind of fixed market value.

Rick_Criswell 12/01/2008 2:40 PM
Hide
-6+

Who pissed in your cereal this morning????
This article is for the masses. The same ones who trampled the walmart employee.The same ones who have no idea what mscon*** or services.*** are.That is aproximately 99% of the readers of this site.

zodiacfml 12/01/2008 2:47 PM
Hide
-3+

i think the article and crashman still has a point, though not for us enthusiast who knows a lot of how things work in a pc,device, or machine.
there are a lot of solutions improving performance but for some people it will be easier for them to spend than spend time learn anything. not really a good attitude but that is just a lot of people do today, probably the reason why super expensive gaming systems and products exist. ignorance is bliss.

Pei-chen 12/01/2008 2:59 PM
Hide
-5+

As a mindless drone, I prefer the “throw more resources at it” approach. The 8GB OCZ PC2-6400 RAM in my Vista x64 computer only cost $50 and I never need to buy more RAM as long as keep this PC (next rebuild Q1 2011)

I am surprised OCZ didn’t send anything for review; they usually have the cheapest kits.

BTW johnbilicki, what would happen to your setup if windows tries to run a program that requires more than 2GB of physical RAM?

malveaux 12/01/2008 3:33 PM
Hide
-1+

I have 8gigs of the XMS2 Corsair in my Vista64 machine. I can't feel any difference from 2gigs that I had. But after turning off the page file. I hear my disc less often. Woo....

=/

98silvz71 12/01/2008 4:00 PM
Hide
-0+

My 4 GB Kingston HyperX DDR2-800 Ram runs at 5-5-5-15 at 1000Mhz with 2.2v. I only payed around 70 dollars for all 4GB. Something is not right with the results that you got for your sets.

Anonymous 12/01/2008 4:42 PM
Hide
-2+

The point of this article was to help outline price changes in the DDR2 market, and how a relatively small amount of cash might help the majority of users (How many people who repair friends' computers see all that crap they have on their machine. Sure you can fix it, but they're just going to accumulate more crap. You can't fix it forever). I remember when I made a build for my family a few years ago. A pair of 1GB Dual channel OCZ 667 was the most expensive part in the build... a number of months after I bought it, I was surprised at how cheap it was. It is seriously 90% cheaper than what I bought then, and higher performance also. 90% off is a huge deal.

Huttfuzz 12/01/2008 5:19 PM
Hide
-2+

Love the article. Thanks Crashman.

ooo 12/01/2008 5:40 PM
Hide
-2+

Great article man thks for the information ¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡¡

Slomo4shO 12/01/2008 6:12 PM
Hide
-0+

Thanks for the write up. The Corsair XMS2 went on sale for as low as $15 after a $35 MIR on Black Friday.

What was the best speeds you were able to obtain on the XMS2 at the rated 1.9v? I have a pair of sticks in the mail and look forward to fine tuning these :)


Comments are closed on this page.

Sponsored links