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  1. #1
    EmuTalk Member thepreserver's Avatar
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    Which RAM is better?

    I need some help fellow EmuTalkers, if you don't mind. You see, I want to upgrade my RAM from 512 MB to 1.5 GB and don't know which to get...

    Should I get x1 1 GB ram stick, or x2 512 MB ram sticks?

    I need to know which one will be more faster and efficient. I don't care about the cost or the fact that it takes up RAM slots, I just want whichever's faster.

    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16820146580
    http://www.newegg.com/Product/Produc...82E16820145568

    AMD Athlon 64 X2 4000+ @ 2.11GHz :: 2GB PC2-5300 RAM @ 669MHz :: NVIDIA GeForce 9500 GT @ 512MB DDR2 ::
    Realtek ALC888 7.1HD Audio :: 250GB SATA HDD @ 7200RPM :: DirectX 9.0 :: USB 2.0 x7


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  2. #2
    Lord of the Flies
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    unless you're working with either CAD or integrated graphics, I really see no significant advantage with 2 sticks (dual channel, if your motherboard supports it)...... but it looks like you are in fact using integrated graphics, so as long as your motherboard supports dual-channel memory configuration, then go with the 2-stick option.
    Folding@Home

    Desktop and "Hackintosh:"
    ASUS P6T6 WS Revolution :: Intel Core i7 920 @ 2.66GHz :: 6GB PC3-12800 DDR3 SDRAM (Triple Channel) :: 2x 768MB ASUS GeForce 8800 Ultra PCI-E (SLI) :: Integrated audio :: 750GB Seagate Barracuda SATA HDD :: Lite-On DVD-RW drive :: 3Com 10/100 NIC (3Mbit ADSL) :: Samsung SyncMaster 305T 30" widescreen LCD @2560x1600 :: Windows 7 build 7100 + Mac OS X 10.5.6 Leopard dual-boot

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  3. #3
    Sony battery Toasty's Avatar
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    It probably won't make much difference. If you had a pair of modules that were close to identical (or two pairs of identical modules) you could double your memory bandwidth if your motherboard supports dual-channel configurations (most do), but neither of your options would achieve that end. (If you were willing to settle for 1GB total by buying one module identical to your current one, or spend a little more and buy either 2x1GB and then discard your current 512MB module or 3x512MB modules identical to your current one it could work.)

  4. #4
    EmuTalk Member thepreserver's Avatar
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    Thank you for your responses! I can't wait to place an order!!!
    AMD Athlon 64 X2 4000+ @ 2.11GHz :: 2GB PC2-5300 RAM @ 669MHz :: NVIDIA GeForce 9500 GT @ 512MB DDR2 ::
    Realtek ALC888 7.1HD Audio :: 250GB SATA HDD @ 7200RPM :: DirectX 9.0 :: USB 2.0 x7

  5. #5
    EmuTalk Member BlueFalcon7's Avatar
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    Wait a minute, how do I do a dual channel configuration? I have one stick in slot 1 and one in slot 3. Slots 1 and 3 are yellow, and slots 2 and 4 are black.

    Edit: oh, and can I run dual channel mode with DDR2 800?

  6. #6
    Moderator Clements's Avatar
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    It is possible to have dual channel with any type of DDR memory providing the motherboard supports it (which yours does).

    According to the manual of your motherboard, DIMM slot 1 and 2 constitute 1 channel, and slot 3 and 4 constitute the other. These slots labelled A1, A2, B1 and B2 respectively in the manual.

    To achieve a dual-channel configuration with your particular motherboard, it appears you need a DIMM in each channel (A and B) and in the same bank, i.e. slots A1 and B1, OR slots A2 and B2.

    Manual here:

    http://support.asus.com/download/dow...el=P5N-E%20SLI
    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails DIMM.PNG  
    Last edited by Clements; June 10th, 2007 at 05:32. Reason: Fixed (someone correct me if I am wrong)

  7. #7
    Sony battery Toasty's Avatar
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    To answer your last question first, yes, it will work with DDR2 800. Wikipedia explains the configuration of dual-channel memory here better than I could. Many memory manufacturers sell memory in pairs for just this purpose.

    EDIT: Aw, Clements is sneaky.

  8. #8
    EmuTalk Member BlueFalcon7's Avatar
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    OK, good, I am running dual channel mode, with fast RAM.

    Thanks for answering

    But one more thing, Why does everyone use DDR2 667? I mean, its satanic I mean, Dell, Apple, and even thepreserver were all using that speed.Why not DDR2 800? I mean, sure it costs more, but they can be overclocked more.

  9. #9
    Sony battery Toasty's Avatar
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    666 would be Satanic, but I think you kinda answered your own question as to why they don't use it in the first part of your last sentence. It's usually pretty much impossible to overclock a manufactured computer anyway - the motherboards generally don't allow it.

  10. #10
    Moderator Clements's Avatar
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    Because DDR2-667 is (or should I say was) cheaper and came out before DDR-800 did, so was more widely available. OEMs like Dell will go for the cheaper option. Various Intel chipsets only officially support up to DDR2-667. Without any CPU overclocking, the performance difference in real-world applications (games in particular, rather than synthetic tests) between them is virtually nil, especially with a Core 2 CPU:

    http://www.anandtech.com/showdoc.aspx?i=2800&p=7

    From an overclockers perspective, most brand-name DDR2-667 will overclock pretty well. Not ideal if you have a CPU with a really low multi such as a E6300, though.

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