Originally posted by: magreen
What are you all smoking?
The OP is talking about a mild OC of up to 2.4GHz. DDR2 667 valueram will take him to 3.0GHz w/o OC'ing the ram. He ain't looking to hit 3.6GHz so DDR2 800 is useless for him.
As for the memory multiplier, it makes almost no difference on a C2D. Using a multi to configure from DDR2 533 to DDR2 800 speeds gets you a whopping 5% increase in overall system performance on a C2D.
(btw, AM2 is totally different due to its integrated memory controller)
Originally posted by: cmdrdredd
If memory doesn't help then why move to DDR3? Why sell DDR2-1066+ memory at all?
Originally posted by: yuppiejr
Originally posted by: cmdrdredd
If memory doesn't help then why move to DDR3? Why sell DDR2-1066+ memory at all?
The DDR2-1066 product is targeted at overclockers, it's produced because there are folks out there who want to push past a 400 mhz FSB with RAM that's guaranteed to scale to their desired clockspeeds without being overclocked. The move to DDR3 is to utilize improvements in the northbridge memory controller in Intel chipsets and lack of long term scalability of current DDR2 parts to match Intel's future architecture plans.
The ONLY advantage in running RAM faster than the FSB of your C2D processor is a decrease in memory latency. In a C2D based system, the processor can only move data in and our of RAM as fast as the Northbridge/FSB clocks will allow - period. Since improved latency is the only major benefit you'd achieve by running RAM faster than your FSB, the same results by purchasing RAM matched to your desired FSB with lower latency characteristics. Running RAM at higher clockspeeds requires looser timings which ultimately negates any latency benefit it would provide compared with buying FSB matched RAM with better timings.
Seriously, read the article I linked in my first post and/or browse around Xbit's memory articles related to C2D - there's a lot of good data on this subject out there if you spend the time reading it.
Also - still waiting to see some screencaps or other proof of this 1000 3DMark score difference? Mind sharing what version of the app you were running? I'd like to test this myself out of curiosity and see if I can replicate your results.
Bandwidth is going to help with Nehalem when Intel integrates the memory controller into the CPU. Just like I said that bandwidth on AM2 makes a major difference, it will also make a major difference with Nehalem. That's why Intel really cares about DDR3 at this time, for the future. At the moment with C2D, the high latencies of the off-chip memory controller masks almost any performance contribution of higher bandwidth.Originally posted by: cmdrdredd
If memory doesn't help then why move to DDR3? Why sell DDR2-1066+ memory at all?
Bandwidth is going to help with Nehalem when Intel integrates the memory controller into the CPU. Just like I said that bandwidth on AM2 makes a major difference, it will also make a major difference with Nehalem. That's why Intel really cares about DDR3 at this time, for the future. At the moment with C2D, the high latencies of the off-chip memory controller masks almost any performance contribution of higher bandwidth.
Read this article: AT reports on overall system performance benefit of higher bandwidth. The whole article is great -- lots of info about C2D and X2 memory controller, etc.
(btw, cmdrdredd, is this the thread you were looking for? Core 2 Duo/DDR2 Memory Guide, Read Me First. )
Originally posted by: magreen
Bandwidth is going to help with Nehalem when Intel integrates the memory controller into the CPU. Just like I said that bandwidth on AM2 makes a major difference, it will also make a major difference with Nehalem. That's why Intel really cares about DDR3 at this time, for the future. At the moment with C2D, the high latencies of the off-chip memory controller masks almost any performance contribution of higher bandwidth.Originally posted by: cmdrdredd
If memory doesn't help then why move to DDR3? Why sell DDR2-1066+ memory at all?
Read this article: AT reports on overall system performance benefit of higher bandwidth. The whole article is great -- lots of info about C2D and X2 memory controller, etc.
(btw, cmdrdredd, is this the thread you were looking for? Core 2 Duo/DDR2 Memory Guide, Read Me First. )
Originally posted by: 996GT2
RAM is so cheap right now that the difference between DDR2-667 valueRAM and DDR2-800 performance RAM is only about $5 or 10 dollars. On Newegg, I even saw a 2 GB Geil DDR2-800 kit for $51 AR! With prices like this, there is almost no reason to opt for the slower DDR2-667 when faster DDR2-800 is only a few dollars more, especially considering it will offer you more flexibility should you decide to increase your OC in the future.
Originally posted by: MarcVenice
Even a mild OC will be able to run 1:1 with ddr-667
Originally posted by: hans007
well i wouldnt say always get the faster option. but at the differences in prices now, i'd just get value ddr2-800.
i picked up a set from outpost for $49 after rebate. you barely save anything with 667 or they are the same price now. but i wouldnt say buy ddr2-1066 so always buy faster is nont smart.