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Will i see much of a improvment if i overclock my 1066mhz ram am running Q9650 @ 4.15 at the mo am running 920 but the next step is 1150.
If you read your first post again you will see there is no mention at all about gameplay or gamingBench testing means nothing in game play
I don't agree with this Corasik, the FSB is not the bottleneck . . .What is your FSB running at, the FSB is a 64bit wide quad pumped bus. To match the timings on a dual channel 128bit wide double pumped memory bus, the memory can be clocked as low as the same base frequency as the CPU's FSB without any significant performance loss
If the FSB is 400MHz (quad pumped) 1600MHz the memory will be the bottle neck if its running at just 400MHz (DDR2-800)IE if your FSB is 1600 (400mhz) then your memory can be as low as 400mhz (800DDR2) and the FSB is already the bottleneck.
I don't agree with this Corasik, the FSB is not the bottleneck . . .
Are you doing this mathmetically or are you basing this on testing?
If the FSB is 400MHz (quad pumped) 1600MHz the memory will be the bottle neck if its running at just 400MHz (DDR2-800)
Effective FSB = 1600MHz
Effective MEM = 800MHz
Anyone that is running a 1.6GHz system bus with 800MHz memory speed will not get as much performance as another person running the same 1.6GHz system bus with 1200MHz Ram, I'm not sure why you are encouraging people to not speedup/overclock their ram?
on cpu-z. rate fsb 1840
You are doing the maths but not the testing I think, I'm certain the system speeds up as the memory frequency increases, what you appear to be saying (with calculator in hand) is that the system has reached maximum speed with the memory running [1:1; sync with the FSB when actually all my first hand experience says otherwise . . .Mathamatically AND tested.
FSB is 64bits @ 1600mhz, MEM = 128bits (dual channel remember) @ 800mhz.
64 x 1600 = 102400
128 x 800 = 102400
The FSB is a bottleneck
Corasik, I'm glad you have knowledge of the maths, thats cool because I'm not great with that stuff, I'm just more hands on practical type of guy. I don't know what kind of testing you did to backup your figures but my own experience has been different to yours . . . .Wayne.. But just for the record... If someone had a motherboard with a broken memory slot, you can get away with running single channel configuration instead, but then you really would need to get 800mhz (ddr1600) to keep up with a 400mhz (1600) fsb
Can you expand on that statement please, I'm sure there is something your trying to tell me but that I am not understanding!If your 800mhz ram can manage timings of 7-7-7-12, and 1600mhz ram can manage timings of 12-12-12-20 then clearly the latency on the 1600mhz will be better (waits more clock ticks, but the ticks are flying by faster)
Can you expand on that statement please, I'm sure there is something your trying to tell me but that I am not understanding!
DDR2-800 (CAS7) 17.5ns 6,400 MB/s
DDR2-1600 (CAS12) 15.0ns 12,800 MB/s
Mathamatically AND tested.
FSB is 64bits @ 1600mhz, MEM = 128bits (dual channel remember) @ 800mhz.
64 x 1600 = 102400
128 x 800 = 102400
The FSB is a bottleneck
Mathamatically AND tested.
FSB is 64bits @ 2400mhz, MEM = 128bits (dual channel remember) @ 800mhz.
64 x 2400 = 153600
128 x 800 = 102400
The FSB is a bottleneck