Triple-Channel DDR3: 6GB Kit Roundup : Have Memory Manufacturers Dropped The Ball?

    Triple-Channel DDR3: 6GB Kit Roundup : Have Memory Manufacturers Dropped The Ball?


    Posted: 23 Feb 2009
    Have Memory Manufacturers Dropped The Ball?

    DDR3 desktop memory has been around for nearly two years, but it wasn’t until a few months ago that we finally got to see the first platform specifically designed to take advantage of its increased data rate. With an on-die memory controller that supports triple-channel mode, Core i7 processors have produced the biggest memory bandwidth improvement we’ve seen since RDRAM met Netburst. But once again, a transition that should have been smooth has been met by memory manufacturers who had other ideas.

    The current problem is one of voltage. While DDR3 is specified to use 1.50 V, manufacturers found that the memory controllers of Core 2-generation chipsets could easily handle far more. Rather than try to produce the fastest possible memory within a relatively small voltage range, most vendors instead chose to use slower parts with extra voltage tolerance to produce highly-overclocked products for the enthusiast market. When Intel announced shortly before its Core i7 launch that the memory controller should not encounter more than 1.65 V, a quick look at the market revealed that only a single manufacturer was producing DDR3-1600 modules for standard-voltage configurations at that time.

    What followed was a mad rush by memory brands to re-label "fast" memory at whatever slower speed was required to get it stable at the new voltage limit. In the process, this "lower-voltage" memory was packed in triple-channel kits to differentiate it from the heavily-overclocked dual-channel kits sold for previous-generation systems. Super-fast DDR3-2000 disappeared for a time, and DDR3-1866 took nearly a month to emerge in 6 GB triple-channel kits, as nearly every existing product was reduced by one or two speed grades to stabilize it under a lower-voltage ceiling.
    December finally brought us high-capacity modules at DDR3-1600 and higher speeds in triple-channel kits, and we quickly rounded up as many of those high-end kits as we could for today’s mega-comparison.

    Read more here.
    Mark's Avatar Posted By: Mark
    23 Feb 2009



  1. Posts : 2,899
    Windows 7 Ult x64(x2), HomePrem x32(x4), Server 08 (+VM), 08 R2 (VM) , SuSe 11.2 (VM), XP 32 (VM)
       #1

    wow now thats sneaky by the manufactures...
    at least now intel made a standard before utter chaos became to big that people would start having problems as having different voltages for ram would be bad for MB's...

    good for Aeneon (which is the one who stood to with the standard volt.) if i would by mem it would be from them (if i would get a i7 core system which would be later on when the this tech sees actual gains on apps...)

    good read Grim
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 436
    Windows 7 Build 7048 x64
       #2

    A very enlightening article. Thans Mr Grim!

    Gives you a good idea on where your favorite memory manufacturer's at the OC scene
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 195
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
       #3

    I just put together a new system for myself. I'm using the DFI LANPARTY JR X58 microATX motherboard with a 920 i7 chip and a G.Skill 6GB memory kit. I installed it in a Thermaltake LANBOX Lite case with one of those Thermaltake quiet high-efficiency 650W power supplies. The G.Skill kit for i7 processors that I got is not the one shown in the write-up. In fact, I chose this one because it was the least expensive triple kit that was rated for 1600MHz at 1.5 volts, not the higher, dangerous, 1.65 volts as many others are. So in theory, this memory kit would allow someone to OC safely.

    Bye.

    PS. Yes, this box ran well with Win7 X64 after getting the latest Intel chipset drivers in.
      My Computer


 

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