Toss Up

Discussion in 'Gaming' started by MiCust, Oct 28, 2006.

  1. MiCust

    MiCust Well-Known Member

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  2. DiabloDj1

    DiabloDj1 Well-Known Member

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    I'd say corsair. Almsot same thing, but u'll save 60 bucks with corsair.
     
  3. MiCust

    MiCust Well-Known Member

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    Yeah if the performance is equal I'll most likely go with the Corsair, I'm just posting this to see if there actually are any real dfferences in perofrmance.
     
  4. Stealth09

    Stealth09 Well-Known Member

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    Corsair is easially the best RAM company.
     
  5. MiCust

    MiCust Well-Known Member

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    Semms to be 2-0 for Corsair, can anyone back G.SKILL just so I can hear both sides of the story?
     
  6. XMasterX

    XMasterX Well-Known Member

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    G-Skill and Corsair are pretty much the same, same timing...

    I say go Corsair, you can save a few bucks..
     
  7. xlink

    xlink GR's Tech Enthusiast

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    They use the same ICs and i beleive they have the same or nearly the same SPDs, of the two choices corsair is the better...

    =================================
    but how about another alternative -
    http://xtremesystems.org/forums/showthread.php?t=120619
    http://www.tankguys.biz/ddr2-3338-p-1690.html

    same ICs(atleast on the same manufacturing process, they're binned lower but the diference is minimal) as the two above, but has a much lower SPD which is handy to those using 965 chipsets and AM2 boards

    all choices listed thus far have approximately the same clockeability.

    if you dont' give a care about heatspreaders...
    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?...N82E16820144157
    http://www.zipzoomfly.com/jsp/ProductDetai...st=pricegrabber

    i want to make sure though, I beleive they are micron D9GKX ICs but kingston is somewhat inconsistant, they have tendancies to exchange for shid.
     
  8. MiCust

    MiCust Well-Known Member

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    I was under the assumption that DDR2 800 is better/faster than DDR2 533? Have I been wrong this whole time?

    And you mentioned that your first two are good on certain types of boards, this is the board I'm looking at getting:

    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.asp?...N82E16813121016

    It says DDR2 Standard: DDR2 667, this means I can only get up to PC5400 667MHz, not DDR2 800?
     
  9. MiCust

    MiCust Well-Known Member

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    Anyone have an answer to this?
     
  10. LiteZoned

    LiteZoned Active Member

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    Lol,I'm stumped\
     
  11. MiCust

    MiCust Well-Known Member

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    +1
     
  12. XMasterX

    XMasterX Well-Known Member

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    you can put 800 ram in a 677 ram mobo, it just may not take it. but even then, some may not even take 677...

    My old ASRock, Socket A board did that to me, it said it was SDRAM 400 compatable, I put in some 400 ram, and it ----ed it up, i had to buy an upgraded board.
     
  13. xlink

    xlink GR's Tech Enthusiast

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    you can put any speed RAM into any board(assuming the default voltages match up clsoe enough) and just change the timings appropriately

    Merged Post:


    it is


    it's just that that DDR533 at 1.8V(it can run at thsoe specs with just 1.6V though) can hit DDR2-1066 at 2.2V(and safely)
    the DDR2-800 can also do this, but it costs more and also has an SPD which defaults to 2.2V which means that on boards which default to 1.6V it won't startup(you have to use a cheep stick of RAM set it to 2.2 V and then swap after)

    all the kits listed here use effectively the same ICs so they are more or less capabel fo the same performance.
     
  14. [.Xero.]

    [.Xero.] Well-Known Member

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    You mustn't know what the hell your talking about, G.Skill is the second best ram company, only under GeIL, and under G.Skill is OCZ, then Corsair.
     

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