I believe that this article is dated. It still carries pertenance to i820 RDram (single channel) not i850 RDram (Dual channel). They say that 820 is NOT a good example of an RDram chipset.
The bottom line is this: i820 is NOT a good chipset. In fact, i820 is likely hampering RDRAM?s performance. Basing our analysis of RDRAM performance on benchmarks obtained using the i820 chipset would be like judging SDRAM performance from benchmarks obtained with a VIA Apollo Pro Plus board, for example.
Even on the i840 (Dual channel) which i850 was derived from, it says...
Instead, a better representation of RDRAM performance would test it on the i840 chipset, with its dual RDRAM channels, operating in lock-step. At best, that translates into over 3200 MB/s of bandwidth using PC800 memory, and at worst, using PC600, 2066 MB/s, still twice as much as PC133 SDRAM. Furthermore, the dual RDRAM channels can actually serve to slightly lower memory latency, a very important factor.
In fact the i820 didnt even require c-rimm terminators, it wasnt truly serial, only the occupied RIMM banks were in serial, and yes if you add one in you are lengthing the serial connection.