T tadmaz Junior Member Aug 10, 2004 14 0 0 Aug 11, 2004 #1 Is it true if I wanted to upgrade to a HT CPU that I'd need dual identical RAM sticks?
L lobadobadingdong Lifer Aug 27, 2002 10,043 2 0 Aug 11, 2004 #2 no, but it would be recommened, the P4 architecture is really dependant on it's memory bus, the faster you can feed it data the better it performs
no, but it would be recommened, the P4 architecture is really dependant on it's memory bus, the faster you can feed it data the better it performs
T tadmaz Junior Member Aug 10, 2004 14 0 0 Aug 11, 2004 #3 aight, I have an old PC-2100 256 MB stick right now, is it advisable to get another chip with the same speed? Or can I go faster than 2100?
aight, I have an old PC-2100 256 MB stick right now, is it advisable to get another chip with the same speed? Or can I go faster than 2100?
T TStep Platinum Member Feb 16, 2003 2,460 10 81 Aug 11, 2004 #4 With the exception of the 3.06 (I think), all P4s with HT are 200mhz bus so PC3200 is optimal. PC2100 will give a performance hit.
With the exception of the 3.06 (I think), all P4s with HT are 200mhz bus so PC3200 is optimal. PC2100 will give a performance hit.
LTC8K6 Lifer Mar 10, 2004 28,520 1,575 126 Aug 11, 2004 #5 The 2 sticks of memory are for dual channel memory operation. They have nothing to do with hyperthreading operating properly.
The 2 sticks of memory are for dual channel memory operation. They have nothing to do with hyperthreading operating properly.
O orangat Golden Member Jun 7, 2004 1,579 0 0 Aug 11, 2004 #6 HT CPUs are only Intel at the moment. Popular Intel chipsets have dual channel memory config.