Soldato
- Joined
- 23 Apr 2009
- Posts
- 11,973
- Location
- Cheshire
Haha, yea I suppose you can call me a scot now (lived north of the wall for 10 years).
The reason I suggested the 1600MHz Corsair XMS3 kit is because that specific kit is very widely regarded as an excellent quality RAM kit from a good company with good warranty - and it only costs a few quid more than the cheapest 1333MHz 4GB kit which is a from a company that no longer makes RAM.
As for running 1600MHz RAM, I should have been clearer - running RAM faster that 1333MHz is not overclocking in the way you would normally imagine it. Since the BCLK (FSB) is locked at 100MHz on sandy bridge systems then the only way you can overclock the RAM is by increasing the RAM multiplier. This in no way affects or overclocks the CPU - since that is controlled by a totally separate multiplier. Hence running a 1600MHz two stick RAM kit on a sandy bridge mobo is incredibly simple.
The reason I suggested the 1600MHz Corsair XMS3 kit is because that specific kit is very widely regarded as an excellent quality RAM kit from a good company with good warranty - and it only costs a few quid more than the cheapest 1333MHz 4GB kit which is a from a company that no longer makes RAM.
As for running 1600MHz RAM, I should have been clearer - running RAM faster that 1333MHz is not overclocking in the way you would normally imagine it. Since the BCLK (FSB) is locked at 100MHz on sandy bridge systems then the only way you can overclock the RAM is by increasing the RAM multiplier. This in no way affects or overclocks the CPU - since that is controlled by a totally separate multiplier. Hence running a 1600MHz two stick RAM kit on a sandy bridge mobo is incredibly simple.