Running Dual Channel Decreases My Memory Performance

marks70

Senior member
Apr 20, 2000
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I have an NF7 w/ a Barton 2500+ @ 200x11. I've been using a single 512MB of Corsair XMS PC3200 RAM (CMX512-3200C2) for the last year and just yesterday installed a second one in a dual channel configuration (slots 2 & 3). I left the timings alone at 6-3-3-2.

When I ran PCMark2002, my memory scored dropped from 6200 to 5900. Why would this be? I expected my score to go up. Do I need to change the timings? I tried 7-3-3-2.5 and 11-3-3-2.5, and that didn't do squat. Any ideas?
 

Peter

Elite Member
Oct 15, 1999
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Socket A processors can't even use the extra bandwidth. This is no news - the CPU bus is 200 MHz DDR, 64-bit width. There's little point in making the RAM bus 200 MHz DDR 128-bit.

NVidia did that to have the surplus bandwidth available to their integrated graphics unit - before they decided to make a marketing feature of it. The subsequent dual-channel-RAM effort from VIA (KT880) proved the same thing: It's pointless.

The only benefit is that with two sets of bus drivers, you don't have to relax your timings as you add DIMMs.
 

marks70

Senior member
Apr 20, 2000
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So I understand why I wouldn't get an increase in performance due to your explanation, but why the decrease?
 

Vette73

Lifer
Jul 5, 2000
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Well for one that is a benchmark, not real world.

The reduction MIGHT be from a latency issue? But even though the AthlonXP does not need DC mem like Intel, it can still help. Mots revoews show gains in the low single % marks, BUT a couple areas actually make the high single to low double % gains.


Do some real world test and see what that shows. I ran my old NF7-S with dual Ch and was happy.
 

Peter

Elite Member
Oct 15, 1999
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Certainly not. Having too many DIMMs on ONE channel may necessitate relaxed timings. Didn't I /just/ say that?