DDR3 almost pointless?

Kewl Munky

New Member
I'm currently reading on this tomshardware.com article on DDR2 vs DDR3. It seems that DDR2 800 and DDR2 1066 are better than DDR3 800 and DDR3 1066. They almost perfectly match in performance, except the DDR2 versions have 100Mhz more memory clock. If you think about that, and the fact that DDR3 is so exspensive, I think it's really pointless to get DDR3 right now unless you are getting DDR3 that's above 1066.

http://www.tomshardware.com/2008/04/09/toms_ultimate_ram_speed_tests/page3.html
 
Look at it this way, the same thing was said when it went from simms to SDRAM/ from SDRAM to DDR/ from DDR to DDR2 and now from DDR2 to DDR3. Usually when new ram first comes out its timming is alittle higher than the higher performance lower timming Ram before it
 
So they are correct when they say that at this current time DDR3 RAM is nearly pointless?

Maybe it will be worth it in a year?
 
Right now, there is no reason to get it other than to say you have DDR3. It could be a year or it could be less, it depends on if people are forced to get DDR3 with new chipsets when they come out.
 
I'm currently reading on this tomshardware.com article on DDR2 vs DDR3. It seems that DDR2 800 and DDR2 1066 are better than DDR3 800 and DDR3 1066. They almost perfectly match in performance, except the DDR2 versions have 100Mhz more memory clock. If you think about that, and the fact that DDR3 is so exspensive, I think it's really pointless to get DDR3 right now unless you are getting DDR3 that's above 1066.

http://www.tomshardware.com/2008/04/09/toms_ultimate_ram_speed_tests/page3.html

DDR2 800 and DDR3 800 both have the same memory clock, what do you mean that DDR2 versions have 100Mhz more memory clock?
 
I thought all DDR3 slots could use DDR2 since it's the same pins, like the PCI-E 2.0 and x16, though not both ways.

No, you can't interchange them. Look at the difference between the 2... the notch is in a different location on both of them, therefore, you can't use ddr2 in ddr3 boards or vice versa.
 
I thought all DDR3 slots could use DDR2 since it's the same pins, like the PCI-E 2.0 and x16, though not both ways.
Nope, they run at different voltages and are designed differently. They moved the slot so people won't confuse the two and try to install DDR3 in a DDR2 slot and vice versa.
 
They can support both but not at the same time. You have slots for ddr2 and different slots for ddr3.
 
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