Standard DDR and DDR2 is 64-bit wides at varying frequencies (MHz). When you multiply the width of the path (the connection from RAM to Northbridge, or in the AMD64 case, RAM to CPU) by the frequency of the path, you get the bandwidth of the path, and thus the actual theoretical bandwidth of the RAM. When you run dual channel, which uses 2 RAM sticks, the path changes to 128-bit. This doubles the bandwidth while keeping the RAM at the same speed. So, DDR400 (PC3200) has 3.2GB/sec of bandwidth (400*64/8 [bits to bytes]/1024 [mb to gb]), but in dual channel it's 400MHz * 128bits [/8/1024 bits to bytes, mb to gb] = 6.4GB/sec.