DDR2 800 showing up as DDR2 775?

Topochocolate

Junior Member
Dec 4, 2006
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videogames101

Diamond Member
Aug 24, 2005
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if you buy DDR800, that means it's rated to go up to that speed, but you have to change it in your bios options to DDR800, instead of whatever your motherboard comes set at.
 

Topochocolate

Junior Member
Dec 4, 2006
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Hmmm... I'll check that out. I guess it just confuses me because DDR2 775 isn't an actual speed of memory as far as i'm aware.
 

videogames101

Diamond Member
Aug 24, 2005
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No, it's not a speed that i've ever heard of. Also if the sticks are not already in the correct slots for duel channel, try putting them there. BTW, i don't rly know alot about memory problems, these are rather generic solutions...
 

videogames101

Diamond Member
Aug 24, 2005
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yep, i'm stumped

you could try changing the voltage a small bit, see if the speed goes up or down, other then that idk
 

firewolfsm

Golden Member
Oct 16, 2005
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It's because your processor has a half multiplier, the ram will run at 775, deal with it, that's a 4% decrease in bandwidth which translates to a .5% decrease in performance.
 

tcsenter

Lifer
Sep 7, 2001
18,893
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You installed the modules in slots 1 and 2, right? That is recommended by Gigabyte when using two modules, though slots 3 and 4 are also supported.
 

Topochocolate

Junior Member
Dec 4, 2006
15
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Yes they're in slots 1 & 2. I actually mis-typed the original post, it's "757" not "775". Inverted my numbers. I still feel this is kind of strange. Thanks for the replies though.
 

DrMrLordX

Lifer
Apr 27, 2000
22,705
12,658
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You can fix the problem by messing around with different combinations of CPU multipliers, memory ratios, and HTT speeds. My X2 consistently underclocks memory unless I use the 1:1 (DDR2-400) ratio and the right multipliers.

It may seem like you'd be losing performance due to reduced bandwidth, but that is not likely the case. You are suffering performance loss due to increased latency. Compensate by tightening timings, if possible. If you're already running at 3-3-3-5 and with every other obscure timing option in your BIOS at its fastest, then you should mess with HTT speeds a bit until you're at DDR2-800; you won't get reduced latency (as measured in cycles), but your CPU performance will, and you'll have the satisfaction of running your memory at spec.