im digging the ocz reaper hpc, i guess ill get that after this next check, that and im thinking a blu/hd drive/ dvd burner.
don't get the current ballistixs. they're single sided are one of the worst ddr2 currently.
Yep, they're garbage. I had to RMA two sets. Finally, on the third replacement, Crucial sent me the double sided D9's (that also have the dual LED lanes).
did you actually have to request the D9's or did they just sent it and you got really lucky? and you bought yellow ballistixs and they sent tracers?
Why would you bother getting so fast RAM? As long you're running it in dual-channel, you'll notice absolutely no performance increase unless you're running some REALLY intensive applications, in which case you'd probably have a DDR3-board and a dual-CPU setup anyways... trust me, if you had DDR2-533 and DDR2-1066 in dual channel with same relative timings (by which I mean that the timings of DDR2-1066 should be double that of DDR2-533 in case of this comparison), you'd gain absolutely no noticeable amount of performance unless you were running some really memory-intensive apps, but thenagain as I said if this was the case you wouldn't be sticking with DDR2 anyways.
I would just get some chep DDR2-800, as long as it has decent timings it will perform just as good as DDR2-1066 in any real-life applications.
No, no, no... the point as, as long as the timings are good and you have your memory in dual-channel, you won't notice a difference. Well you might notice a difference if you upgrade from 533 (unlikely), but if you have DDR2-800 in dual-channel it will, in any real-life applications, perform just as good as DDR2-1066 or DDR2-1200, unless the timings are way off.Well I game, so should I notice a difference? So what your saying is, if I get 800MHz with is not that far from 667MHz ill notice something, but if I buy the 1066MHz which is almost double the freq that im not going to notice it?
get some Gigabyte 2GBHZ 2X1GB. I use that and have had it clocked very high at tight timings. I believe the stock clock is 800MHz at 4-4-4-12 but I have run it at 1000 MHz at 4-4-4-12 with ease.
No, no, no... the point as, as long as the timings are good and you have your memory in dual-channel, you won't notice a difference. Well you might notice a difference if you upgrade from 533 (unlikely), but if you have DDR2-800 in dual-channel it will, in any real-life applications, perform just as good as DDR2-1066 or DDR2-1200, unless the timings are way off.
Again, I'm assuming here that the memory is in dual-channel and the timings are fairly good - DDR2-533 with high latencies will bottleneck heavy games.
For 4-4-4-12 is excellent for DDR2-800, just like 5-5-5-15 is for DDR2-1066 and 3-3-3-9 is for DDR2-667.Well, how do I know if the timings are good? Whats a good timing?
The less, the betterThe more the better or less the better?
Generally that's all you need to do - also, while the computer POSTs, it should display a message saying that it's running in dual-channel. If you want to make sure, get CPU-Z, it will tell on the memory tab.Also How do I know if its in dual channel mode. I know I have that capability, Do I just make sure there in the same colored slots?