I am using cheap generic sticks with my Abit KT7. Could any of you that have any of the sticks listed here post the chips info as I've done below? Real life numbers are what matters. It would be interesting to see how my generic PC133 compares to what miniMUNCH is using, since we both have similar motherboards. Also, while the KT7 does have a limitation of how high you can push the FSB, the added setting of FSB+PCICLK is what the memory is concerned with, as miniMUNCH has shown. 153MHz at Cas2 sounds great.
You can download Motherboard Monitor version 5 or newer (free).
Get Motherboard monitor
It gives details about your memory. Click settings/system info, then chip icon.
For example, here is what my generic 128meg, PC133 stick, shows with FSB at 110, and memory running at FSB+PCICLK or 146MHz, and Cas2 in Bios. Duron 600@935MHz.
Module banks 2
Cycle time@Cas2= 7.3125
Sdram Access= 5.25
Banks on each= 4
Cas supported= 2,3
Min Clock X-1= 10
Max data X-1= 6
Min Row Pre= 20
Min Row Actice= 15
Min Ras to Cas= 20
Min Ras Pusle= 45
Module Bank Density= 64
Module total density= 128
Speed= 133
Another good free test for comparing memory speed is Sandra.
Download Sandra
Sandra memory test results for generic PC133 @ 146MHz
The above system scores:
ALU/Memory Bandwidth 524 MB/s
FPU/Memory Bandwidth 632 MB/s
Also, the links I posted prior show the Kingmax beating out Mushkin.
Can someone point to links the say otherwise? It's one thing to say, "Great", but try to back it up with links that directly compare the chips if you can. I have neither chip, but just want to make the best choice on my next purchase, and contrary to what most say here, looks like Kingmax is best. Please correct me with links to facts.