mfenn
Elite Member
Hello,
I thought I had my final setup for my new PC, but some information has been brought to my attention which indicates that an i7 875K + a good P55 chipset motherboard would be a better choice instead of the original, i7 930 + ASUS P6TD Deluxe.
A friend of mine says that the high end P55 motherboards have memory controllers which are faster than the one in the CPU. The max speed on the 930 with a X85 mobo is 25.6gb/s which the cpu can work with the memory. Although the P55's memory controller with a... lets say 8GB DDR3 2000 memory in dual mode will have 2x16GB/s speed which is 32GB/s.. much more that the 25.6GB/s.
I`m kind of lost here, and the info might not be very clear. I`d like to sort this out.
This person says that I can run DDR 1600 or even 2000 memory much faster on a P55 platform than on a X58 one. This is because of the memory controller which is on the P55 mobo. The X58 doesn`t have such a memory controller.
I`d appriciate if someone could shed some light on this matter.
Thank you!
First off, the memory controllers on all Nehalem architecture processors (that includes P55 and X58) are built onto the CPU, so the motherboard makes no difference. Regarding the memory bandwidth, LGA 1156 parts (those are the ones that work on the P55) officially support DDR3 1333 while LGA 1366 parts (those work on the X58) only officially support DDR3 1066. However, both can clock much higher. The memory controller in the LGA 1366 parts is also triple-channel versus the dual-channel on the LGA 1156 parts.
This discussion of memory bandwidth is pretty much irrelevant for 95% of (non-server) workloads though. I agree with your friend that you should go for 1156 over 1366, but solely because you can get a higher-clocked 1156 part for the same total platform cost as an equivalent 1366 part. The difference between available memory bandwidths doesn't even factor into the argument IMHO.
I didn't mention this before because the very thought of going 1156 will incite a few members of this forum to ridiculous thread-crapping (some sort of fanboy heresy I suppose), but since you brought it up...
