Originally posted by: thekillerjks
I just ordered 1GB G. SKILL RAM and I noticed it is not Dual-Channel. Is it really a huge increase in performance I mean I here with 4 sticks you can't even run dual channel. And I plan on upgrading to 4x 512MB soon.
Originally posted by: mobius0
I'm using an intel penium 4 and I'm wondering can I use dual channel of one type of memory (OCZ) and another (kingston). I currently have 2 sticks of 128 kinston and 1 stick of kingmax 256 memory. I'm not running dual channel but it seems that its still faster than just running 2 sticks of 128 kingston. Since I just bought 2 sticks of OCZ 512 sticks I was wondering if it would be wise to use those 2 sticks with the 2 sticks of kingston or would that be a large performance penalty since i'm mixing and matching?
Originally posted by: mobius0
No my mobo does use dual channel its just that I added a 256 kingmax. Before that it was running on dual channel. This also brings up another question though, Is it possible to run dual channel with 3 sticks of ram? 2 of them are the same (2x128 kingston) and one isn't (256 kingmax)?
Originally posted by: allanon1965
your 20% performance gain is a little on the high side....this is an excerpt from crucials website about dual channel performance... "While performance gains from dual-channel chipsets aren't huge, they can increase bandwidth by as much as 10 percent. To those seeking to push the performance envelope, that 10 percent can be very important." so 10 percent is about limit, there are other factors in the equation as well, so 10 percent is not guaranteed, just the max they say it CAN be....most of the time its no more than 3% to 5%.....
The up to 20% performance gain was about the difference between 1T and 2T timings on AMD...
Originally posted by: Viditor
Originally posted by: allanon1965
your 20% performance gain is a little on the high side....this is an excerpt from crucials website about dual channel performance... "While performance gains from dual-channel chipsets aren't huge, they can increase bandwidth by as much as 10 percent. To those seeking to push the performance envelope, that 10 percent can be very important." so 10 percent is about limit, there are other factors in the equation as well, so 10 percent is not guaranteed, just the max they say it CAN be....most of the time its no more than 3% to 5%.....
The up to 20% performance gain was about the difference between 1T and 2T timings on AMD...
http://www.xbitlabs.com/articles/cpu/display/athlon64-3800_3.html