RAM - One slot of RAM or two?
- Akashio
- Joined: Sun Nov 25, 2001 6:46 pm
RAM - One slot of RAM or two?
Which is faster: 2 x 1GB PC3200 DDR RAM or 1 x 2GB PC3200 DDR RAM? Why?
- Akashio
- Joined: Sun Nov 25, 2001 6:46 pm
Re: RAM - One slot of RAM or two?
Please help me out...simple question...Akashio wrote:Which is faster: 2 x 1GB PC3200 DDR RAM or 1 x 2GB PC3200 DDR RAM? Why?
- FurryCurry
- Joined: Sun Jul 14, 2002 8:41 pm
Not quite that simple.
What chipset does the motherboard in question use?
Does it support dual-channel access, like say, the Intel 865/875 series and a lot of others?
If your board supports dual channel operation, 2 sticks of matched memory will almost certainly be faster. If it doesn't, it shouldn't really make a difference either way.
Needs more brand/model/support chipset being posted for a definitive answer.
What chipset does the motherboard in question use?
Does it support dual-channel access, like say, the Intel 865/875 series and a lot of others?
If your board supports dual channel operation, 2 sticks of matched memory will almost certainly be faster. If it doesn't, it shouldn't really make a difference either way.
Needs more brand/model/support chipset being posted for a definitive answer.
My Eyes Are The Victim's Eyes.
My Hands Are The Assailant's Hands.
My Hands Are The Assailant's Hands.
- Zero
- Joined: Sun Jul 11, 2004 1:32 am
- Location: Somewhere else
- Contact:
- bum
- 17747114553
- Joined: Sat Nov 08, 2003 9:56 pm
RAM is generaly affected less by heat than any other system component. RAM heat sinks do little but look prety. If your runing a board that supports dual ddr, the two stick will double the bandwidth or something like that. But they must be the same sticks (speed, latency, etc). If your geting two sticks, its best to buy dual ddr packs which are basicaly 2 sticks in a fancy box designed to be run in dual ddr.Zero wrote:On average, two sticks can outdo one because of heat distribution.
-Zero
-
- Joined: Sat Apr 16, 2005 7:37 pm