Intel Core 2 Duo Review
Foxconn C51XEM2AA 8EKRS2H Motherboard Re
Asus P5W DH Deluxe Motherboard Review
Cooler Master iGreen 430W PSU Review
MSI K8N Diamond Plus Review
List All categories
Category: Memory
Manufacturer: Various
PC4000 Memory Shootout 1GB Dual Channel
Posted by:
Arnie
on 17th of October 2003
PC-4000 Memory Round Up
Memory speeds hit a bit of a rock at PC3200, with only extreme overclockers needing anything more than that. AMD platforms showed little or know benefit with asynchronous memory speeds, and although the P4 showed good gains, only a fraction of people had the equipment required to go for the super high FSBs needed. The 800Mhz FSB Pentium 4s have changed all of that however, with their 200MHz stock FSB and bags of room for overclocking, PC3500 suddenly seemed very slow.
As always the performance brands like
Corsair
,
OCZ
and
GeIL
were out of the traps with PC3700 and faster solutions, but now there are several solutions for super high memory speed we thought it only right to grab as many as possible and run a shoot out in typical OcPrices fashion.
Up for contention today we have
A-Data
PC4000,
Corsair
XMS4000,
Corsair
XMS4000 Pro,
Kingston
HyperX PC4000,
OCZ
PC4000 EL-DDR,
OCZ
PC4000 EL-DDR Gold,
GeIL
PC4000 and
Mushkin
PC4000. All but one of these are retail samples borrowed from stores so that “cherry picking” does not become a factor in determining which ram is the best to buy. The
Corsair
XMS Pro is just too new to be in any UK stores at the time of press, but we have never had reason to doubt the integrity of Corsair's samples, with them consistently showing the same performance as real end-users obtain on forums.
Our test rig originally consisted of an
Asus
P4C800 motherboard, an
Intel
2.4C Processor, an Enermax 550W PSU and a
Vapochill
Premium Edition. Problems with the Asus, which eventually caused it to die half way through the testing however meant that we ended up using an
Abit
IC7 Max 3 with the latest 1:1 BIOS installed. We ran a special version of winmemtest to verify stability of each module in Dual Channel mode. It’s very similar to memtest86 which many of you may have used before, but more accurately simulates a windows environment. If the modules pass 5 runs of memtest we then proceed to windows where they must complete a 30min Sandra memory burn in, whilst 3DMark 2001SE loops over the top. If they pass this they are considered stable.
We tested our memory modules at the following speeds:
2.8V 200MHz 1:1 CAS 2 3-3-7
2.8V 250MHz 1:1 CAS 3 4-4-7
2.8V 250MHz 1:1 CAS 2.5 4-4-7
2.8V 260MHz 1:1 CAS 3 4-4-7
2.8V 260MHz 1:1 CAS 2.5 4-4-7
2.8V 265MHz 1:1 CAS 3 4-4-7
2.8V 265MHz 1:1 CAS 2.5 4-4-7
2.8V 270MHz 1:1 CAS 3 4-4-7
2.8V 270MHz 1:1 CAS 2.5 4-4-7
2.8V 275MHz 1:1 CAS 3 4-4-7
2.9V 275MHz 1:1 CAS 3 4-4-7
2.9V 200MHz 1:1 CAS 3 4-4-7
Why the last test? Simply to see if any of the sticks had problems at high voltages.
Select Page:
Page 1 - Introduction
Page 2 - A-data PC-4000
Page 3 - Corsair TwinX XMS4000 1GB kit
Page 4 - Corsair TwinX XMS4000 Pro 1GB kit
Page 5 - GeIL PC4000 Dual Channel Platinum Kit
Page 6 - Kingston HyperX 1GB Dual Channel PC4000
Page 7 - Mushkin PC4000
Page 8 - OCZ PC4000 EL-DDR Dual Channel 1GB Kit
Page 9 - OCZ PC4000 EL-DDR Gold Edition Dual Channel 1GB Kit
Page 10 - Price and Performance Summary
Next page:
A-data PC-4000
>>
Find and compare prices for 'PC4000 Memory Shootout 1GB Dual Channel' at
Pricebomb.com
[
] or
Pricebomb.co.uk
[
]
© Copyright 2000-2010, ByteSizedReviews.com. All Rights Reserved [
Privacy Policy
]
Pricebomb.co.uk
Pricebomb.com
PlanetPrices.co.uk