Why is DDR400 (PC3200) so expensive?

Q

Lifer
Jul 21, 2005
12,046
4
81
I wanted to get 2GB of PC3200 184pin DDR for my PC, and I was surprised that this was much more expensive than any other RAM type out there (well you know what I mean)

Why is it so expensive if it's older than everything else?
 

Setral

Senior member
May 26, 2000
868
0
0
Because it isn't being made, and as stock goes down, prices go up.

Newer memory, there is just too much of it already produced and the only way to move units is to sell dirt cheap.
 

taltamir

Lifer
Mar 21, 2004
13,576
6
76
o_O

WOW... I need to look through some of the my older ram... also i need to stop throwing it in the trash when it sells for less than 15$ on ebay because apparently it goes right up in price.
 

Beanie46

Senior member
Feb 16, 2009
527
0
0
Originally posted by: Astrallite
I sold 2GB of DDR400 CAS2 for $140 a few months ago on ebay.

Then you found a sucker since one can find quite a few manufacturers still making and selling 2GB sets of DDR CAS2 RAM, although it sells for $70-$80 per 2GB set (OCZ, Corsair, GSkill, Patriot, Kingston HyperX, Buffalo to name a few.) But $140? Like I said, you found a sucker.

Biggest thing about the price is volume. While it's still being made in small batches today, the volume being produced is a small fraction of what it was years ago. Small volume=higher prices.
 

alcoholbob

Diamond Member
May 24, 2005
6,389
468
126
Originally posted by: Beanie46
Originally posted by: Astrallite
I sold 2GB of DDR400 CAS2 for $140 a few months ago on ebay.

Then you found a sucker since one can find quite a few manufacturers still making and selling 2GB sets of DDR CAS2 RAM, although it sells for $70-$80 per 2GB set (OCZ, Corsair, GSkill, Patriot, Kingston HyperX, Buffalo to name a few.) But $140? Like I said, you found a sucker.

Biggest thing about the price is volume. While it's still being made in small batches today, the volume being produced is a small fraction of what it was years ago. Small volume=higher prices.

It was the highest end Corsair DDR RAM. The only set (AFAIK) that did 2-2-2-5 on AMD platforms back in the day. Most of the others defaulted to cas 2.5, or were only stable to 2-3-3-6. That was the reason it went for a high cost.