Memory Q

myocardia

Diamond Member
Jun 21, 2003
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91
Yes, you would notice that you now had two open RAM slots, that you didn't have beforehand.
 

MajinCry

Platinum Member
Jul 28, 2015
2,495
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Ya would be able to get better clocks, and perhaps timings. With this here Phenom II, I'm locked in @ 1333mhz when using all four RAM slots. When I remove two of me sticks, I can get 1600mhz without any voltage bumping.

So yah. If you fancy buggering around with the clocks and timings, yes. Yes ya will.
 

XavierMace

Diamond Member
Apr 20, 2013
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In reality, when you actually notice the difference when using your computer? Not likely.
 

isekii

Lifer
Mar 16, 2001
28,578
3
81
I was able to pick some up at a great price. $52 bucks shipped for 8g kit.
I guess i'll swap it out.
 

VirtualLarry

No Lifer
Aug 25, 2001
56,587
10,225
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If you had an Intel rig, going from dual-rank to single-rank might cost you some performance.

Edit: I specifically did not mean "dual-channel". That's a separate issue. Google "dual rank DIMM" for more info if you don't know what "rank" refers to.
 
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isekii

Lifer
Mar 16, 2001
28,578
3
81
If you had an Intel rig, going from dual-rank to single-rank might cost you some performance.

Yea i'm not sure i'll' mix and match.

I think i'll just run 2 x 8gb sticks in dual channel until i can pickup another set of 16gb.

Next thing I got to try is overclocking my cpu.
 
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LTC8K6

Lifer
Mar 10, 2004
28,520
1,576
126
IIRC, modern Intel chipsets can run in DC mode with mixed size memory sticks. That is, you can take a 4 and an 8 and run 12gb in dual channel mode.

Also, two 8's in one set of slots, and two 4's in the other set of slots, would definitely still be dual channel.
 

isekii

Lifer
Mar 16, 2001
28,578
3
81
IIRC, modern Intel chipsets can run in DC mode with mixed size memory sticks. That is, you can take a 4 and an 8 and run 12gb in dual channel mode.

Also, two 8's in one set of slots, and two 4's in the other set of slots, would definitely still be dual channel.

I'm running it in a Biostar TZ68a+ (Z68) Chipset. I wonder if that can do that with different sizes
 

isekii

Lifer
Mar 16, 2001
28,578
3
81
Also another question is, what's the likelyhood that Canonlake will use DDR3L ?
I'm thinking about grabbing another set of 16gb to max out to 32gb.
 

myocardia

Diamond Member
Jun 21, 2003
9,291
30
91
IIRC, modern Intel chipsets can run in DC mode with mixed size memory sticks. That is, you can take a 4 and an 8 and run 12gb in dual channel mode.

Also, two 8's in one set of slots, and two 4's in the other set of slots, would definitely still be dual channel.

The difference between the two scenarios you've outlined here are the amount of RAM that will be in dual channel. An 8GB stick + a 4GB stick in each channel will give you 24 GB, all in dual-channel mode. Two 8GB sticks in one channel, plus two 4GB sticks in the other channel, will give you 16GB in dual-channel, and 8GB in single channel. The question though is, why in the world would anyone purposefully go out of their way not to run all of their RAM in dual-channel?