865PE & 875P Memory Guide

by Evan Lieb on June 9, 2003 6:30 PM EST

ABIT IC7 (875P)

Note: N/B Strap set to PSB533 at 1:1 (DDR400) unless otherwise specified

Memory @ 400MHz DDR (Default CAS Latency)
SPD
Fastest Timings
Corsair LL TwinX (CAS 2)
Pass
2-2-2-5
Crucial (CAS 3)
Pass
2.5-3-2-5
Kingston HyperX (CAS 2)
Pass
2-3-2-5
OCZ EL (CAS 2)
Pass
2-3-2-5
TwinMOS (CAS 2.5)
Pass
2.5-3-2-5

Comments:

Corsair LL (TwinX): Everything ran smoothly.

Crucial: We were forced to set the N/B Strap option to PSB800 instead of PSB533 to get the memory to work in SPD mode. This lowered performance a little bit, but the memory was stable at these settings regardless.

Kingston HyperX: We were forced to set the N/B Strap option to PSB800 instead of PSB533 to get the memory to work in SPD mode. This lowered performance a little bit, but the memory was stable at these settings regardless.

OCZ EL: We were forced to set the N/B Strap option to PSB800 instead of PSB533 to get this memory to work at all (in SPD mode or manually programmed). This lowered performance a little bit, but the memory was stable at these settings regardless.

TwinMOS: We were forced to set the N/B Strap option to PSB800 instead of PSB533 to get this memory to work at all (in SPD mode or manually programmed). This lowered performance a little bit, but the memory was stable at these settings regardless.

The Test ABIT IC7-G (875P)
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  • mrcaveman - Wednesday, November 26, 2003 - link

    Great article. I set my watch by you guys. Most of my decisions about computer hardware is based on your very helpful articles. keep up the great work.
  • Anonymous User - Sunday, August 17, 2003 - link

    I noticed in your artical you use Hyper-x 3500. I purchased the Gigabyte 8KNXP and Hyper-x 3200, to my disappointment they are not compatible! Kingston has ignored all e-mails about this problem. I would not recommend any of their products if using this motherboard.
  • Anonymous User - Friday, August 15, 2003 - link

    At the moment looking for good memory for my Epox 4PCA3+ mainboard I purchased recently. Seems to be difficult to get the TwinX modules from Corsair (512 MB CL2) here in Holland, if you know a "cheap" supplier please post here...

    This article, this website very useful! In my favorites... YV
  • SoSolid - Tuesday, July 29, 2003 - link

    This is a very useful article. Not only do we see just numbers indicating which manufacturer makes the most fastest memory but also in "final words" the author discusses some alternatives.

    Excellent!
  • shinerburke - Monday, July 21, 2003 - link

    Why was Mushkin not included in this test? Also when will we see a similar test on the NForce2 boards?
  • Dagger1011 - Friday, July 18, 2003 - link

    How about twinmos? You only commented on the other three. In my country, only kingston and twinmos are available and unfortunately, hyperx is a lot more expensive than twinmos!
  • Anonymous User - Sunday, July 13, 2003 - link

    Well I'm just about to upgrade my PC and saw the TwinMOS package @ addonsonline.co.uk for £60. Sounds good for 512MB. I downloaded the CPU-Z program and checked the timings of my Crucial 256MB PC2100 DDR and to my suprise the CAS Latency is 2, RAStoCAS is 2, RAS Precharge is 2, and Cycle Time is 4???? is this not a bit fast???? OR is slower clocked memory able to run @ faster timings??
  • Anonymous User - Saturday, July 12, 2003 - link

    Further comment to the above...
    DDR-II is on the near horizon BUT will it be the answer for super-fast compatible memory?

    New memory design, structure and packaging will probably require mew motherboards.(I envisage "teething problems" etc.)

    Incompatibility will still probably reign!
  • Anonymous User - Saturday, July 12, 2003 - link

    One wonders if these "compatabilty charts" still hold for larger sizes of memory like 2 off 512MB?

    What happens with greater than 1GB?

    Are these REALLY new technologies or older DDR ones being "Officially Overclocked"?
    viz ONE BIOS DOES NOT SUPPORT <2.5 CL

    Memory with CL=2 are from CHOICE chips.
    Memory with CL=2.5 seems to be the norm.
    Thus memory with CL=3 are easily overclocked to CL=2.5.
  • Anonymous User - Sunday, July 6, 2003 - link

    Interesting article.
    What does the graph show.
    It has numbers at the end of the bars (e.g. 339.6) - what is it a measurement of.
    Is a larger number better or worse?

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