New Memory Highs: Corsair and OCZ Introduce DDR550
by Wesley Fink on February 19, 2004 6:03 PM EST- Posted in
- Memory
Performance Test Configuration
The Memory testbed for evaluating the Corsair XMS4400v1.1 and OCZ PC4400 is the same used in our earlier reviews of DDR500 and other High-Speed Memory.OCZ PC3700 Gold Rev. 2: The Universal Soldier
OCZ 4200EL: Tops in Memory Performance
Mushkin PC4000 High Performance: DDR500 PLUS
Corsair TwinX1024-4000 PRO: Improving DDR500 Performance
Mushkin & Adata: 2 for the Fast-Timings Lane
Searching for the Memory Holy Grail - Part 2
All test conditions were as close as possible to those in our earlier memory reviews.
INTEL 875P Performance Test Configuration | |
Processor(s): | Intel Pentium 4 2.4GHz (800MHz FSB) |
RAM: | 2 x 512MB Corsair XMS4400v1.1 TwinX (DS) 2 x 512MB OCZ PC4400 DC Kit (DS) 2 x 512MB OCZ PC3700 Gold Rev. 2 (DS) 2 x 512MB OCZ 4200EL(DS) 2 x 512MB Mushkin PC4000 High Performance (DS) 2 x 512MB Corsair TwinX4000 PRO (DS) 2 x 512MB Mushkin Level II PC3500 (DS) 2 x 256MB Adata DDR450 (SS) 2 x 512MB Adata PC4000 (DS) 2 x 512MB Corsair PC4000 (DS) 2 x 512MB Geil PC4000 (DS) 4 x 256MB Kingston PC4000 (SS) 2 x 256MB Kingston PC4000 (SS) 2 x 512MB OCZ PC4000 (DS) 4 x 256MB OCZ PC3700 GOLD (DS) |
Hard Drives | 2 Western Digital Raptor Serial ATA 36.7GB 10,000 rpm drives in an Intel ICH5R RAID configuration |
PCI/AGP Speed | Fixed at 33/66 |
Bus Master Drivers: | 875P Intel INF Update v5.00.1012, SATA RAID drivers installed, but IAA not installed |
Video Card(s): | ATI 9800 PRO 128MB, 128MB aperture, 1024x768x32 |
Video Drivers: | ATI Catalyst 4.1 |
Power Supply: | Vantec Stealth 470Watt Aluminum |
Operating System(s): | Windows XP Professional SP1 |
Motherboards: | Asus P4C800-E (875) with 1015 Release BIOS |
Since both Corsair and OCZ target their DDR550 memory at the Intel 875/865 enthusiast, we only tested on our Intel test bed.
Test Settings
The following settings were tested with Corsair XMS4400v1.1 and OCZ PC4400:- 800FSB/DDR400 - the highest stock speed supported on 875/865 motherboards.
- 1000FSB/DDR500 - the specified rating of the majority of recent memory modules that we have tested.
- 1066FSB/DDR533 - the maximum speed that many current Intel 865/875 boards can achieve. This value was also tested because it provides 3.2GHz speed at 12x266, which is a useful comparison to standard Intel 3.2GHz performance.
- 1100FSB/DDR550 - the specified rating of the test memory modules.
- Highest Stable Overclock - the highest settings we could achieve with this memory and other memory we have tested.
13 Comments
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retrospooty - Thursday, February 19, 2004 - link
Nice results at 5:4 vs 1:1 ... See, I told you so, after reading one of your older Ram articles from a few months back... 5:4 2-2-2 beats 1:1 2.5-4-4-8 anyday =)I'm glad you tested it !
kamper - Thursday, February 19, 2004 - link
holy tiny target market, batman!how many people require memory to run at 275fsb default?
Pumpkinierre - Thursday, February 19, 2004 - link
Very good memory article once again Wesley. I dont know where this 'low latency memory doesnt make any difference' argument started but from my observations, it is false. OCZ usually test on an ABIT IC7 so I wonder why it did't make the grade on the DDR550?Any hints as to when DDR500@ 2-2-2-5 is going to become reality. It seems like the old BH5s are still the lowest latency mem. chips and they've been around for a year now. 1:1 at low latencies and PAT aggressive is the way to go. That's why I run my 2.6c at 2.8 even though it goes stable to 3.3 but then I got to run the mem. at 5:4 (no PAT) and performance improvement is barely noticeable.