Have $140 to spend on 2 256mb sticks of DDR RAM, what should I get?

kehi

Diamond Member
Sep 18, 2000
3,357
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Hey guys, I am going to buying this from newegg and want to know what you guys think is a good choice. I want at least pc2700 but if I can get something higher for the price I will. I have been looking at the Corsair XMS Extreme Memory Speed Series 256MB 32MX64 PC-2700C2PT With Platinum - Silver Heat Spreader OEM here.. Please lmk what you think and if you suggest something else. Thanks :)


BTW: I need two sticks to run dual channel DDR on my Nforce2 mobo
 

Amorphus

Diamond Member
Mar 31, 2003
5,561
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try some Twinmos RAM, or Corsair TwinX ram... those are supposed to be tested/optimized for dual-channel mode, and supposedly perform as well as/better than XMS ram.
 

Ryan

Lifer
Oct 31, 2000
27,519
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Save your money - you're only gonna get a few FPS outta high performance crap - it's not worth it.
 

chizow

Diamond Member
Jun 26, 2001
9,537
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If you go with Corsair, go with LL, not C2. The price isn't much more, and there were problems reported with C2 when nForce2 was first released.

If you go with Corsair XMS PC2700, get TwinX LL for less.

Kingston HyperX PC3000 should do at least the Corsair rated timings at PC2700, but costs significantly less.

If you want something in the middle, you can check out the Twinmos PC3200 that use the same Winbond 5ns chips that Corsair does. I don't have a link to a reputable dealer, but you should be able to turn something up in hot deals or in CPU/OC'ing if you can't find a link in a search in this forum.

Also, don't feel like you're stuck with Newegg. I've found Googlegear to consistently be the price leader of reputable online e-tailers, and I bought my XMS TwinX 1024LL from Monarch a few months ago b/c Newegg was charging $40 more for it!!! Use Googlegear as a reference point and then do some comparison shopping.

Faster RAM is always good when it comes to future compatibility/OC'ing, but personally I think you're limiting yourself a bit by buying 2 x 256MB now. I guess it really depends on what you plan to use your PC for and when you think you might need more RAM, but I've felt that going with 1 x 512MB and getting a second later is the better move. Also, as they say, that last 10% in performance always costs the most, and the same is true for memory. I don't think anyone will argue that Corsair is the best when it comes to doing their rated speed at a rated timing, but expect to pay for it. I've gone through enough RAM and found that tha the flexibility of excellent RAM when it comes to OC'ing was worth the extra money.

Chiz