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Which memory manufacturer do you choose if price isn't a factor?

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bgc99

Senior member
Aug 13, 2004
472
0
71
Thanks for the replies. I knew OCZ quit making ram modules. It's funny how brands fall in and out of favor. Five years ago, the OCZ I have was recommended by a lot of people at the time.
 

StrangerGuy

Diamond Member
May 9, 2004
8,443
124
106
Since when prices are never a factor?

I never even bothered to looked outside of basic RAM prices as long as I can remember.
 

Ben90

Platinum Member
Jun 14, 2009
2,866
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I haven't been in the performance loop for quite a while, but your going to want to be looking at who makes the IC, not the packaged thing.

Asking for what company makes the best RAM is like asking which website sells the best processor. The actual question you would want to ask in this scenario would be what the best processor is.

I know Elpida used to make the fastest DDR3 despite being plagued with problems. This was a couple of years ago and the IC's in question have been pulled from the marked because of said problems. XS might be the best place to start your search for the best RAM ICs.
 

Ben90

Platinum Member
Jun 14, 2009
2,866
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After some research it does indeed look like Elpida Hyper is going to be the fastest memory money can buy. Unfortunately non of the major retailers carry the good stuff. Used will probably be your only option, and I can easily see the negotiated price going a few grand for a highend kit of the time that still works.
 

e-drood

Member
Jun 15, 2011
169
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hynix - performance / samsung & micron - midstream + reliability

m4e using g.skill 4gbx2 f3-12800cl8d-8gbxm hynix chips (cl9 may contain several possible chips) (cl7 also hynix) and w7 enterprise 64bit

4gb --- 8gb --- 16gb begins to slowdown a little / 8gb effective
 

dpodblood

Diamond Member
May 20, 2010
4,020
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81
I would normally say Corsair, but their heat spreaders are too large these days. I've been using G.Skill lately.
 

e-drood

Member
Jun 15, 2011
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ben90 elpida does produce good dram, pls see www.elpida.com/en pls note ddr3 module timings - mainstream & if oc'd loosened to cl12 0r 13 + v increase... their sodimms are good and widely used, as are samsung
 

86waterpumper

Senior member
Jan 18, 2010
378
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Elpida is silly fast when it comes to timings and latency, but that isn't as important as it used to be and it for sure costs a big premium. It is more useful for amd systems than it is for intel. For my current build I went with the 1.35 volt mushkins, we will see how they do...
 

Ben90

Platinum Member
Jun 14, 2009
2,866
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ben90 elpida does produce good dram, pls see www.elpida.com/en pls note ddr3 module timings - mainstream & if oc'd loosened to cl12 0r 13 + v increase... their sodimms are good and widely used, as are samsung

I don't believe they are as fast as they used to be. It was possible to get DDR-2300 @ 8-8-8-24 almost two years ago. The fastest currently Newegg sells is DDR-2200 @ 9-11-9-28. I couldn't tell you who makes the current stuff.
 

e-drood

Member
Jun 15, 2011
169
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their drams are not - elpida is now using powerchip tw as foundry - elpida buys 1/2 of fab output with powerchip using balance for other clients - also powerchip has stopped marketing under it's own brand name due to use of elpida technology transfer...

you are correct - elpida focused on mid market drams/memory modules these days
 

BayouL

Member
Dec 9, 2000
38
0
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Mushkin, then Corsair. I've been using Mushkin or Corsair since maybe the black cartridge cpu days! The first PC I built was a Pentium 233, overclocked to 266!