RAM naming conventions...

MexicanNinja

Junior Member
Dec 26, 2004
4
0
0
I have been looking around for new motherboards and have decided to go with the GIGABYTE "GA-K8NF-9" motherboard. However, the next step eludes me, trying to find the right RAM for the motherboard.

It says that it is 4x DIMM Supports dual channel DDR266/333/400 Max 4GB. Now i wanted to buy ddr 400, but what is the pc#### of it? is PC-4000? Damn the funky naming conventions of it...

I have looked online for the motherboard manual but it wasn't much help.

I was going for 2 sticks of ram it so i can use the duel channel ability of the motherboard. I was thinking about 512 total to start with since i am on a budget.

Thanks
 

joelslaw

Senior member
Dec 9, 2004
466
0
0
also found this:

PC1600 - 1.600GB/s bandwidth (8 x 100 x 2), runs at DDR-200

PC2100 - 2.128GB/s bandwidth (8 x 133 x 2), runs at DDR-266

PC2400 - 2.400GB/s bandwidth (8 x 150 x 2), runs at DDR-300

PC2700 - 2.656GB/s bandwidth (8 x 166 x 2), runs at DDR-333

PC3200 - 3.200GB/s bandwidth (8 x 200 x 2), runs at DDR-400

RAMBUS PC800 - 3.200GB/s bandwidth (2-bytes x 800Mhz x 2 RIMMS)

RAMBUS PC1066 - 4.26GB/s bandwidth (2-bytes x 1066MHz x 2 RIMMS)

Found it here:

http://www.hexus.co.uk/content...QmdXJsX2hpc3Rvcnk9LTI=
 

ts3433

Platinum Member
Jun 29, 2004
2,731
0
0
Originally posted by: MexicanNinja
Thanks. Now to find good 'ol cheap ram...

Corsair Value Select and Mushkin Value do fine. I would recommend getting 2x512 for games--they really benefit from a gig of RAM, and this option is only around $140.

As said earlier, the bandwidth rating (PC____) of DDR memory is produced by multiplying the speed rating (DDR___) by eight.
 

joelslaw

Senior member
Dec 9, 2004
466
0
0
I personally like PDP ram. for the same amount you'd pay for the bargin ram mentioned above you could get the good stuff from PDP.
 

ts3433

Platinum Member
Jun 29, 2004
2,731
0
0
Link for stuff of theirs around $140? Their 2-3-2-{5 or 6} (this stuff isn't even the TCCD) for 2x512 was around $180, last I checked. Corsair and Mushkin are by no means low-quality RAM, either.
 

joelslaw

Senior member
Dec 9, 2004
466
0
0
no no, you misunderstand. i'm not putting down either of those companies (in fact I personally think corsair is the best of the best) By the good stuff I meant timings. Example: yes the 23251t is $180, but any corsair with anywhere near those timings will cost over $210 (unless i'm mistaken) The ram you were refering to (value select) is mostly 2.5 and 3 (once again, unless I'm mistaken) As far as TCCD goes, I haven't researched that side of things too much. But from what I've read it doesn't seem too important. So all I am saying is for 40 more you can go with the CAS 2 instead of CAS 2.5 or 3. Fair enough?
 

ts3433

Platinum Member
Jun 29, 2004
2,731
0
0
Point's still moot. Timings themselves make very little difference in performance (besides 1T/2T command rate, and even then, maybe only when overclocking)--in a series of various tests (including lots of gaming applications), the difference between CL3 and CL2 was usually less than 3%, which is unnoticeable, if not within a reasonably fair margin of error.
 

joelslaw

Senior member
Dec 9, 2004
466
0
0
point taken.

you have any links to somewhere that I can read about TCCD? I've been searching and can't find anything too insiteful.
 

ts3433

Platinum Member
Jun 29, 2004
2,731
0
0
TCCD is a type of memory chip made by Samsung. It is considered the best overclocking RAM chip at the moment, and possibly the best of all DDR chips (besides maybe BH-5, though TCCD doesn't require insane voltage as much). OCZ Platinum Revision 2 uses these chips, but you can get basically the same stuff for cheaper. G.skill PC4400 CL2.5 has these chips with a great Brainpower PCB to overclock them, and Patriot's offering is the one "with XBL," probably their fancy term for 2-2-2-5 timings. (This is very important for the overclocker to take note of, as the 2-3-2-5 does not use TCCD.)

However, in many situations, overclocking RAM isn't even necessary for a CPU overclock to have good performance, at least on a S939 A64. Read Zebo's thread in CPU/OC for more on that.
 

aplefka

Lifer
Feb 29, 2004
12,014
2
0
I thought the RAM was also based on the CPU, but I could be mistaken (I didn't read all of post, someone may have mentioned this).
 

MisterChief

Banned
Dec 26, 2004
1,128
0
0
Some MoBo's have a "support matrix", which will run RAM at speeds accorinding to the FSB. As an example the 865PE Neo2-V has a matrix like this:

DDR266-400FSB
DDR333-533FSB
DDR400-800FSB

You can use DDR400 with a lower FSB, but it isn't recommended, because the RAM doesn't run at the speed it was designed for.
 

ts3433

Platinum Member
Jun 29, 2004
2,731
0
0
The optimal RAM speed to use is based on the FSB speed of the CPU. You want to run synchronously. Match 200MHz RAM with a 200MHz FSB, for example (this would include a 400 FSB Athlon XP, since it's a DDR bus, as well as an 800 FSB P4, because that's a quad-data rate bus). You may as well buy DDR400 for all speeds, though, because it's usually the same price as slower speeds and will carry over to a new rig better.
 

MexicanNinja

Junior Member
Dec 26, 2004
4
0
0
Thanks for the info......

Alittle toooo much info....everything flew over the top of my head here...TCCS, CAS, AIEEE!!!!

I was thinking of trying the Cruical Ballistix PC-3200 512 MB stick of ram. Mainly for its $120 price and its from Crucial, but i haven't really read to much into this brand of ram from Cruical. I am tempted to think that this is cruical's response to Corsair's offerings.

Anyways, i am going with the corsair's CMX512-3200C2PRO 512 MB or the Cruical ram mentioned above, pending critics from other members.

Now on a second thought, since the motherboard can either do single or dual channel ram, which mode is faster? i am just curious. For instance, if i buy 1 stick of 512 mb of ram, will it be beaten by 2 sticks of 256 mb ram in dual mode in terms of speed?
 

ts3433

Platinum Member
Jun 29, 2004
2,731
0
0
As I mentioned before (with a link to some evidence), you don't need to get fancy Ballistix or XMS RAM even if overclocking. With a S939 you will want to run dual channel, but for $20 more than that stick of Ballistix you can have a gig of Corsair or Mushkin value RAM (CL2.5). The gig of slightly slower RAM will be much better than half a gig of slightly faster RAM.

EDIT: Oops, there never was any link. LINK