- Oct 9, 1999
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A bit of background first - I'm building my self a new system around an E8400. Already had most of the parts lying around other than the CPU and mobo, including 4 GBs of "extra sweet" Ballistix PC2-8500 that I had accumulated (ie. handpicked from several batches I had been through and tested extensively). I wanted a new, fairly high-end mobo and was waiting for an X48 board, but now with the delay (again), I decided X38 would do. And despite reading about some other users (here and elsewhere) having problems with Asus boards and Ballistix, I was fairly convinced they were just being bitten by the old issue where the BIOS voltage was initially set too low (ie. 1.8) for the Ballistix, which generally like higher voltages. Thus I bought an Asus Maximus Formula - sweet board and found a great price, $20 cheaper than NE to boot ! I wasn't worried because I knew how to handle the "problem", plus most of my "sweet" Ballistix modules would run at 2.0 anyways (vs. 2.2 spec), sometimes boot even lower.
Welp, "it" bit me. So I called a friend who works for Micron to get me hooked up with a really good tech, vs. calling in cold to their Crucial support center. Detailed the problem to him and he acknowledged there are large numbers of mobos out there having issues with Ballistix (but not std. Crucial) memory. He also noted that it is very "hit & miss", not just among companies, but also among models, and that even two of the exact same boards may not work comparably, or at all, with Ballistix. Further, he said it was their opinion, at this point, that the problem "lay at the board level with the manufacturers". Not exactly surprising ... could be Crucial covering their butts, OR, could be that in truth, quality of design and manufacturing ain't what it used to be. I'm leaning towards the latter theory, esp. considering my Ballistix are all older rev, before they cheapened them (slightly) for the blowout pricing and rebates they have been going through lately.
In finishing our conversation, I asked what board/brand I should buy in order to be able to use my Ballistix without problem. I offered up several other models by Asus, DFI, and Gigabyte that I had been looking at, but he nixed them ALL ! Told me the only boards he could recommend right now for use with Ballistix were those by MSI. Said Asus and Gigabyte were on par when it comes to the problem, and that I should totally avoid DFI these days. Yikes !
Now if this had been a cold call to Crucial TS and I had gotten any old flunky, I could imagine the above scenario, but considering this guy is supposed to be a top level tech there, per my friend, I don't know what the heck to think.
Any suggestions/comments ?
MR
Welp, "it" bit me. So I called a friend who works for Micron to get me hooked up with a really good tech, vs. calling in cold to their Crucial support center. Detailed the problem to him and he acknowledged there are large numbers of mobos out there having issues with Ballistix (but not std. Crucial) memory. He also noted that it is very "hit & miss", not just among companies, but also among models, and that even two of the exact same boards may not work comparably, or at all, with Ballistix. Further, he said it was their opinion, at this point, that the problem "lay at the board level with the manufacturers". Not exactly surprising ... could be Crucial covering their butts, OR, could be that in truth, quality of design and manufacturing ain't what it used to be. I'm leaning towards the latter theory, esp. considering my Ballistix are all older rev, before they cheapened them (slightly) for the blowout pricing and rebates they have been going through lately.
In finishing our conversation, I asked what board/brand I should buy in order to be able to use my Ballistix without problem. I offered up several other models by Asus, DFI, and Gigabyte that I had been looking at, but he nixed them ALL ! Told me the only boards he could recommend right now for use with Ballistix were those by MSI. Said Asus and Gigabyte were on par when it comes to the problem, and that I should totally avoid DFI these days. Yikes !
Now if this had been a cold call to Crucial TS and I had gotten any old flunky, I could imagine the above scenario, but considering this guy is supposed to be a top level tech there, per my friend, I don't know what the heck to think.
Any suggestions/comments ?
MR
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