1.25v DDR3 RAM?

darckhart

Senior member
Jul 6, 2004
517
2
81
lower voltage allows you to populate more dimm slots before stressing the memory controller.
 

Concillian

Diamond Member
May 26, 2004
3,751
8
81
Slightly less power consumption and heat.

very, very slightly. I had some 1.35v RAM I think I measured 1W difference on the Kill-a-Watt vs. the same RAM at 1.5v.

Also, potentially more OC headroom, but that's not a big deal right now for anything other than Llano's using the on-die GPU.
 
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Blain

Lifer
Oct 9, 1999
23,643
3
81
IMO the main benefit of lower voltage rated memory is an indicator or higher quality.
The more voltage a DIMM needs to be slammed with in order to run stable the lower the quality of the chips.

IMO high clock rated, tight timings and low voltage = premium quality modules.
 

ncalipari

Senior member
Apr 1, 2009
255
0
0
smaller likelihood of memory failure, compared with another ram module built with the same manufacture process and rated at an higher voltage.



At the same price point a lower voltage module is to be preferred.
 

Puppies04

Diamond Member
Apr 25, 2011
5,909
17
76
IMO the main benefit of lower voltage rated memory is an indicator or higher quality.
The more voltage a DIMM needs to be slammed with in order to run stable the lower the quality of the chips.

IMO high clock rated, tight timings and low voltage = premium quality modules.

This +1
 

greenhawk

Platinum Member
Feb 23, 2011
2,007
1
71
lower power - more important for a laptop than a desktop. small advantage with heat (1W). But then that lower power is part ram and part memory controller/cpu, so not just the ram.

does give a little head room for overclocking as the memory controller can go higher and still be in spec.

otherwise, little needed benifit to have. Only worth worrying about for most people if that is what your cpu needs.