Hi all,
Say intel lists memory compatibility for a given processor (e.g., Xeon E5-2620) as DDR3-800, 1066, and 1333. Is this a hard limit (like the memory controller can't go any faster)? That is, if I put in DDR3-1600, I will see no gain in bandwidth?
I'm pretty sure this is untrue--no hard limit. If that is correct, then could there be other limitations that prevent me from running DDR3 at 1600mhz with E5-2620? Like maybe these expensive server-grade motherboards (e.g., those by supermicro) won't allow me to 'overclock' the memory controller?
I'm asking b/c someone I know needs to purchase a workstation, but it *must* be a dual-socket machine assembled by Penguin Computing (go go red tape). His application is memory bandwidth-limited, so DDR3-1600 (or higher) would be a good boost for him. But I don't want to advise him to buy fast memory if the CPU, motherboard, BIOS, or whatever will prevent the faster RAM from running above 1333mhz.
Thanks!
Say intel lists memory compatibility for a given processor (e.g., Xeon E5-2620) as DDR3-800, 1066, and 1333. Is this a hard limit (like the memory controller can't go any faster)? That is, if I put in DDR3-1600, I will see no gain in bandwidth?
I'm pretty sure this is untrue--no hard limit. If that is correct, then could there be other limitations that prevent me from running DDR3 at 1600mhz with E5-2620? Like maybe these expensive server-grade motherboards (e.g., those by supermicro) won't allow me to 'overclock' the memory controller?
I'm asking b/c someone I know needs to purchase a workstation, but it *must* be a dual-socket machine assembled by Penguin Computing (go go red tape). His application is memory bandwidth-limited, so DDR3-1600 (or higher) would be a good boost for him. But I don't want to advise him to buy fast memory if the CPU, motherboard, BIOS, or whatever will prevent the faster RAM from running above 1333mhz.
Thanks!