Ripley's right on the RAM speed. It's a waste of money so you can say you've got "fast" ram. With his CPU stock the most he'll get out of his RAM is 667 regardless what speed the RAM is capable of. Even if he OC's the CPU it's doubtful he'd exceed 800Mhz RAM.
Simple math: dual core double pumped CPU on a 1333 FSB = 1333/4 = 333.333 clock cycle.
DDR2 RAM processing requests from the CPU = 667 (333.333 clock cycle x 2)
{small voice}
What BE meant to say was
quad pumped CPU (# of cores doesn't matter - or at least, I've never read so) on a 1333 FSB = 1333/4 = 333.333 clock cycle
Yes, I know,there's one in
every crowd ...
P.S. I just realized that my post could be taken as though I'm supporting the argument against faster RAM. I meant it neither for or against, simply a clarification of the calculation.
PPS. OK, I looked at the thread in depth, and now I'm really confused, I just shouldn't be looking at this stuff at 3 in the morning when I can't sleep. I have to be missing something stupid, because I don't get the arguments against (potentially) upgrading RAM. His current memory is limited to 6.4 GB/s max. With no processor overclock the system clock is set to 333, and the memory clock for DDR2 800 is 200, so the motherboard is using a 6:5 divider. So how wouldn't DDR2 1066 at 8.5 GB/s max be a better solution, regardless of the 8:5 divider (if I looked it up right)?
Assuming reasonable timings on the DDR2 1066, why are you guys saying that faster RAM would be "worthless"? It might not be cost effective, but I don't see where the argument that
"DDR2 however has only a multiplier of two (2) so sync ram speed is actually 666Mhz".
or
With his CPU stock the most he'll get out of his RAM is 667 regardless what speed the RAM is capable of
apply.
As far as I know, assuming no OC on either processor or RAM, that's not going to happen until he gets memory that has to be clocked faster than the processor clock (which is 333 MHZ without any OC, and would correspond to something like DDR2 1333 (actually, something beyond that since DDR2 1333 - which AFAIK doesn't exist - would be where you'd get to a 1:1 divider, or "synced" memory ). DDR2 1066 is still only clocked at 266 Mhz. And would be as much as 1/3 faster on memory intensive operations.
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