Hierarchy of good RAM
Hierarchy of good RAM
Hey, guys, what's the order of RAM companies from best to worst? I know Mushkin is at the top, and Samsung is near the bottom (heh), but where do the others fall?
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Yeah - Samsung memory is found on many of the leading brands.
I'd say Corsair was the most respected memory maker of recent times.
Things to remember though - the RAS-CAS numbers of memory mean more than the name on the stick. SPD settings which are aggressive and headroom for pushing the RAM faster (FS with the same CL speeds is a very strong reason to buy.
I'd say Corsair was the most respected memory maker of recent times.
Things to remember though - the RAS-CAS numbers of memory mean more than the name on the stick. SPD settings which are aggressive and headroom for pushing the RAM faster (FS with the same CL speeds is a very strong reason to buy.
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I'm partial to Infineon, mainly because their memory performs over and beyond what its rated for. I once got a stick of their PC133 to run at 149MHz before I had stability issues....but I'm sure I could have gotten it higher if I had pulled out the SB Live and modem.
I'm running Corsair in my current system and I absolutely love it.
Kingston
Micron
Corsair
Infineon
Crucial
All good grands if you ask me.
I'm running Corsair in my current system and I absolutely love it.
Kingston
Micron
Corsair
Infineon
Crucial
All good grands if you ask me.
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<BLOCKQUOTE><font size="1" face="Arial">quote:</font><HR><font face="Arial" size="3">Originally posted by Mr. Perfect:
I'm using two pc2700 Hyper-X in dual channel mode. They have a very nice 2-2-2-5 timing on them.</font><HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
Thats Kingston IIRC.
Scorch: You forgot Micron. Micron makes some very good memory.
I'm using two pc2700 Hyper-X in dual channel mode. They have a very nice 2-2-2-5 timing on them.</font><HR></BLOCKQUOTE>
Thats Kingston IIRC.
Scorch: You forgot Micron. Micron makes some very good memory.
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What somebody hasn't mentioned is that the PCB design and build quality of the RAM is a highly contributing factor to memory performance. Great RAM chips won't work well on a poorly designed/built PCB.
I have no information about who makes the best PCBs, but given that all RAM comes from only about 4 or 5 (?) different fabs, it's a sure bet that the top makers of RAM sticks get speed-binned chips, and spend quite some time/money on designing high quality PCBs for them.
I have no information about who makes the best PCBs, but given that all RAM comes from only about 4 or 5 (?) different fabs, it's a sure bet that the top makers of RAM sticks get speed-binned chips, and spend quite some time/money on designing high quality PCBs for them.
MD: Micron makes Crucial, so Micron is in there, just with their higher quality name.
Akasha: PCB is Printed Circuit Board; basically the board that the chip are soldered to. Timing, if you mean CAS latency, is the time it takes the memory to respond, more or less, and lower is better. I believe it is in nanoseconds, but not positive. CAS 2 is the best, AFAIK. As for when people say 2-2-2-5, I have no idea what the other numbers mean, but CAS is the first one I think.
Akasha: PCB is Printed Circuit Board; basically the board that the chip are soldered to. Timing, if you mean CAS latency, is the time it takes the memory to respond, more or less, and lower is better. I believe it is in nanoseconds, but not positive. CAS 2 is the best, AFAIK. As for when people say 2-2-2-5, I have no idea what the other numbers mean, but CAS is the first one I think.