Here it is at Tweaktown.
Also featured are Twinmos, Buffalo, Corsair, Mushkin and Kingmax.
Also featured are Twinmos, Buffalo, Corsair, Mushkin and Kingmax.
Originally posted by: aggressor
Makes my Corsair XMS3500 seem very overpriced :|
Originally posted by: Lyfer
Absolutely amazing, crucial is rated to run cas 3, but they ran it at 2-2-2-5! Take that Corsiar XMS-LL🙂! BTW for the overclocked benchmarks, what Cas latencies were they running? Still 2-2-2-5?
Originally posted by: shady06
please someone buy crucial and duplicate those results...
Originally posted by: joshg
hrmmm. I was just looking over at AMDForums and a reply to one of the threads there about this review interested me.
One person said that the Crucial memory that they used in this review was actually Samsung memory chips on a Crucial PCB with Crucial label, however the ones that you buy from Crucial will be Micron chips, therefore you would get much different numbers than this.
Anyone care to comment on this?
Originally posted by: joshg
OK time to quench the rumors. 😀
Q'n'A with Shawn Baker (snippets of email conversations modified into Q/A format 😉 ):
Q: "[...] the chips on your modules were definitely Micron chips, then?"
A: "Yes they are Micron 🙂 "
Q: "Also, I noticed you had double-sided memory (16x16MB instead of 8x32MB), and in your review you were able to hold tighter timings and higher speeds then the other reviews I have seen where they used single sided 8x32MB modules."
A: "Yes mine where double sided and usually single sided does give better results but I can't really explain it 🙂 "
Hmm.. Okay, so these definitely were Micron chips on the memory. I can't really figure out why he got such good OC results whereas those using single sided modules could not go quite as high as he? Could it possibly be because he was running them @ 2.8v while the other reviews left theirs at default?