ASE Labs
Welcome Guest. Please register or log in now. There are 710 people online (0 Friends).
  • Home
  • Articles
  • News
  • Forum
  • Register/Login

Corsair XMS2 DHX 4GB PC2-6400

Author
Aron Schatz
Posted
March 25, 2008
Views
82380
Corsair XMS2 DHX 4GB PC2-6400
Corsair steps forward with their XMS2 DHX 4GB kit of DDR2. This product combines good performance at a great price.
Tags RAM Corsair DDR2 DHX XMS2

Page 2: Stability, Testing, Conclusion

Stability:

Let me reiterate again how ASE Labs determines stability. Yes, I do this on every RAM review. At ASE Labs, RAM is only stable if it passes Memtest86+ and a plethora of memory intensive applications for a few hours like mprime and doing continuous compiling of specific programs. Just because the memory POSTs and runs doesn't mean that it is stable. Linux users may find memory errors by having errors in compiling (very common) to errors in tar as well as segfaults. Windows users can expect program faults and BSODs. Memory stability is very important. When we say that a specific specification of RAM is stable, we mean it!

The XMS2 DHX handles itself very well. At the rated speed of 800MHz with timings of 5-5-5-18 with the given JEDEC voltage of 1.8V, the modules were perfectly stable and performed as expected. The SPD contains the values for running the modules at the rated speed, but I always manually set my timings.

Overclocking:

These modules provided very interesting results in regards to overclocking. I expected some results to the tune of the »Crucial Tracer Red being a 4GB kit with similar timings and such. I started with lower the timings to 4-4-4-12 to see if it was stable. It wasn't, not until the voltage was upped to 1.9V. At that point, the RAM was running perfectly stable with enhanced timings. I decided to see how far the RAM could go in terms of speed. Starting at the default 1.8V and timings of 5-5-5-18, anything higher than 890MHz would cause some errors. What is really interesting is that past 1.95V, these modules started erroring at speeds that were stable at lower voltages.

It turns out that these modules hate high voltages. I know of some people that volt-mod their motherboards so you need to make sure that you can deliver 1.95V or less to make these modules stable. Very interesting to say the least.

Testing:

I want to preface this section by saying how ASE Labs will be doing benchmarks from now on. There will be no synthetic benchmarks at ASE Labs. This means that for fair comparisons, an apples to apples system will need to be made. We will be using tools that anyone will be able to get so anybody can reproduce our results. Current memory tests include compilation of LAME and FFMPEG, encoding in each of those programs, and a round of mprime to round everything out. We will be adding testing as we see fit during future reviews. If you would like to see specific (real world stuff) programs, please send me an email.

By using real world testing, a deduction can be made about memory at the same specs; Unless a major problem occurs in a set of modules, there is no statistical difference between one set and another set of modules. It is more important to look at the stability and overclockability of the modules as well as the price.

The results of this section are actually the same as the previous »Crucial Tracer Red review so you can refer to that for the results. Needless to say that modules running at the same timings perform the same. Corsair's rated timings are slower, but the resulting speed decrease is less than the statistical error so it isn't something to generally get excited about.

Conclusion:

These modules run for about $125 at the time of this review. This is a very good price for a 4GB of DDR2 that has some overclockability in it. Corsair is well known for their RAM and their business is built on it. It may not be as fancy as »other kits, but it gets the job done at a great price.
« Previous Page  
Page 1
Page 2
View As Single Page Print This Page Print Entire Article
Related Articles
  • Crucial Tracer Red 6GB Triple PC3-12800 BL3KIT25664TR1608
  • Kingston HyperX PC2-8500 4GB KHX8500D2T1K2/4G
  • Core i7: Memory Speed
  • Kingston HyperX 2GB PC3-14400 KHX14400D3K2 XMP
  • Kingston HyperX 2GB PC3-12800 KHX12800D2K2
members/attachments/upload/2008/03/25/2473m.jpg packaging.jpg members/attachments/upload/2008/03/25/2474m.jpg modules1.jpg members/attachments/upload/2008/03/25/2475m.jpg modules2.jpg members/attachments/upload/2008/03/25/2476m.jpg modules3.jpg members/attachments/upload/2008/03/25/2477m.jpg modulesx.jpg members/attachments/upload/2008/03/25/2478m.jpg specs.jpg

Title

Medium Image View Large
Login
Welcome Guest. Please register or log in now.
Forgot your password?
Navigation
  • Home
  • Articles
  • News
  • Register/Login
  • Shopping
  • ASE Forums
  • Anime Threads
  • HardwareLogic
  • ASE Adnet
Latest News
  • Kingston HyperX Cloud 2 Pro Gaming Headset Unboxing
  • Synology DS415+ Unboxing
  • D-Link DCS-5020L Wireless IP Pan/Tilt IP Camera
  • Actiontec WiFi Powerline Network Extender Kit Unboxing
  • Durovis Dive Unboxing
  • Bass Egg Verb Unboxing
  • Welcome to the new server
  • Gmail Gets Optional Preview Pane
  • HBO Go on Consoles
  • HP Touchpad Update
Latest Articles
  • D-Link Exo AC2600 Smart Mesh Wi-Fi Router DIR-2660-US
  • HyperX Double Shot PBT Keys
  • Avantree ANC032 Wireless Active Noise Cancelling Headphones
  • ScharkSpark Beginner Drones
  • HyperX Alloy FPS RGB Mechanical Gaming Keyboard
  • D-Link DCS-8300LH Full HD 2-Way Audio Camera
  • Contour Unimouse Wireless Ergonomic Mouse
  • HyperX Cloud Alpha Pro Gaming Headset
  • Linksys Wemo Smart Home Suite
  • Fully Jarvis Adjustable Standing Desk
Latest Topics
  • Hello
  • Welcome to the new server at ASE Labs
  • Evercool Royal NP-901 Notebook Cooler at ASE Labs
  • HyperX Double Shot PBT Keys at ASE Labs
  • Avantree ANC032 Wireless Active Noise Cancelling Headphones at ASE Labs
  • ScharkSpark Beginner Drones at ASE Labs
  • HyperX Alloy FPS RGB Mechanical Gaming Keyboard at ASE Labs
  • D-Link DCS-8300LH Full HD 2-Way Audio Camera at ASE Labs
  • Kingston SDX10V/128GB SDXC Memory at ASE Labs
  • What are you listening to now?
  • Antec Six Hundred v2 Gaming Case at HardwareLogic
  • Sans Digital TR5UTP 5-Bay RAID Tower at HardwareLogic
  • Crucial Ballistix Smart Tracer 6GB PC3-12800 BL3KIT25664ST1608OB at HardwareLogic
  • Cooler Master Storm Enforcer Mid-Tower Gaming Case at HardwareLogic
  • Arctic M571-L Gaming Laser Mouse at ASE Labs
  • Contour Unimouse Wireless Ergonomic Mouse at ASE Labs
Press Release
  • Huntkey Has Launched Its New Power Strips with USB Chargers on Amazon US
  • Inspur Releases TensorFlow-Supported FPGA Compute Acceleration Engine TF2
  • Hot Pepper Introduces Spicy New Smartphones in US Markets
  • Sharp Introduces New Desktop Printers For The Advanced Office
  • DJI Introduces Mavic 2 Pro And Mavic 2 Zoom: A New Era For Camera Drones
  • DJI Introduces Mavic 2 Pro And Mavic 2 Zoom: A New Era For Camera Drones
  • Fujifilm launches "instax SQUARE SQ6 Taylor Swift Edition", designed by instax global partner Taylor Swift
  • Huawei nova 3 With Best-in-class AI Capabilities Goes on Sale Today
  • Rand McNally Introduces Its Most Advanced Dashboard Camera
  • =?UTF-8?Q?My_Size_to_Showcase_Its_MySizeId=E2=84=A2_Mobil?= =?UTF-8?Q?e_Measurement_Technology_at_CurvyCon_NYC?=
Home - ASE Publishing - About Us
© 2010 Aron Schatz (ASE Publishing) [Queries: 18 (8 Cached)] [Rows: 303 Fetched: 46] [Page Generation time: 0.24381995201111]