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bimbla wrote:I want to have dual channel memory.
I have shortlisted Kingston HyperX, 2 X 256, PC 2700.
Will 2 DIMM's do the job or is there anything else called 'matched pair' or 'Dual channel enabled' RAM?
Thanks and regards.
bimbla.
Boba_Fett wrote:bimbla wrote:I want to have dual channel memory.
I have shortlisted Kingston HyperX, 2 X 256, PC 2700.
Will 2 DIMM's do the job or is there anything else called 'matched pair' or 'Dual channel enabled' RAM?
Thanks and regards.
bimbla.
As long as they are the same make and brand you will be fine. "Matched Pair" sets are nothing but a companies way of charging you $10 more for 2 regular sticks of ram.
bimbla wrote:I want to have dual channel memory.
I have shortlisted Kingston HyperX, 2 X 256, PC 2700.
Will 2 DIMM's do the job or is there anything else called 'matched pair' or 'Dual channel enabled' RAM?
Bimbla.
hoxlund wrote:in a few months its gonna be even better running ddr2 dual channel
tazdevl wrote:The only reason to get a dual channel kit is if you plan to overclock. Depending on the manufacturer and RAM chips used, you might find one DIMM holding you back from a significantly higher overclock.
Shredder wrote:tazdevl wrote:The only reason to get a dual channel kit is if you plan to overclock. Depending on the manufacturer and RAM chips used, you might find one DIMM holding you back from a significantly higher overclock.
Dual channel has nothing to do with overclocking. Running memory in dual channel is to increase performance by eliminating memory bandwidth bottleneck.
pranav81 wrote:Shredder wrote:tazdevl wrote:The only reason to get a dual channel kit is if you plan to overclock. Depending on the manufacturer and RAM chips used, you might find one DIMM holding you back from a significantly higher overclock.
Dual channel has nothing to do with overclocking. Running memory in dual channel is to increase performance by eliminating memory bandwidth bottleneck.
Shredder is right.
tazdevl wrote:So I'll say it again... if you plan on overclocking a dual channel board, buying a dual channel/matched pair kit is a good idea because the probability of one DIMM holding you back is fairly high if you go with 2 unmatched DIMMs.
bimbla wrote:Is there any performance diff. betn. Valueram and hyperX at their RATED speeds?
bimbla wrote:What if you put PC3200 in Mobo that supports PC2700 max? The sys. wont start or will it start with PC2700 performance?
What if you put PC3200 in Mobo that supports PC2700 max? The sys. wont start or will it start with PC2700 performance?
CowboySlim wrote:OTH, my board has a max rating of 333MHz, equivalent to PC2700, and will not run at all with PC3200 memory installed.
Shredder wrote:CowboySlim wrote:OTH, my board has a max rating of 333MHz, equivalent to PC2700, and will not run at all with PC3200 memory installed.
PC3200 is compatible and can run as PC2700. Your motherboard probably needs BIOS upgrade as that problem maybe a bug in BIOS.
CowboySlim wrote:Not exactly, it is an inherent characteristic of the motherboard, Intel D845GEBV2. However, I haven't updated the BIOS in a while and there now may be one that accomodates PC3200.
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