Monday, November 19th 2012
Crucial Unveils Ballistix Low Profile Memory
Crucial, a leading global brand of memory and storage upgrades, today announced the immediate availability of Crucial Ballistix Low Profile (LP) memory, which delivers a true low profile design to provide more clearance around high-end CPU coolers and improve airflow throughout the system. Designed for performance enthusiasts and small form factor computer builders with limited space, Crucial Ballistix LP memory features all the performance benefits of Ballistix memory without the height concerns of taller modules.
Since overclocked systems with power-hungry processors are often heat-intensive and require oversized CPU coolers to regulate temperatures, clearance for memory modules is often limited. To address this, Crucial Ballistix LP memory modules are between 15 percent and 35 percent lower profile than competing modules. Using up to 10 percent less power (1.35V) than standard modules (1.5V), Crucial Ballistix LP memory modules also help reduce the cooling problem in high-performance systems, resulting in a lower thermal profile and less fan noise, and enable easier overall system cooling."Crucial Ballistix LP memory delivers all the benefits users have come to expect from Crucial high-performance memory - just in a smaller package," said Jeremy Mortensen, senior worldwide product manager, Crucial. "While other low profile offerings on the market provide some clearance, Crucial Ballistix LP memory delivers a true low profile and low power design to give users more clearance around their CPU coolers, while using less power for increased energy efficiency."
Leveraging the industry-leading design and manufacturing capability of Micron Technology, Crucial Ballistix LP memory is backed by a limited lifetime warranty, and is compatible with the latest platforms from Intel and AMD. Crucial Ballistix LP memory is available in a variety of popular DDR3L speeds and up to 8 GB in density for both Crucial Ballistix Sport VLP (very low profile) and Tactical LP models. Crucial Ballistix LP memory modules are available now at www.crucial.com, Amazon.com, Newegg.com, and Tigerdirect.com.
Since overclocked systems with power-hungry processors are often heat-intensive and require oversized CPU coolers to regulate temperatures, clearance for memory modules is often limited. To address this, Crucial Ballistix LP memory modules are between 15 percent and 35 percent lower profile than competing modules. Using up to 10 percent less power (1.35V) than standard modules (1.5V), Crucial Ballistix LP memory modules also help reduce the cooling problem in high-performance systems, resulting in a lower thermal profile and less fan noise, and enable easier overall system cooling."Crucial Ballistix LP memory delivers all the benefits users have come to expect from Crucial high-performance memory - just in a smaller package," said Jeremy Mortensen, senior worldwide product manager, Crucial. "While other low profile offerings on the market provide some clearance, Crucial Ballistix LP memory delivers a true low profile and low power design to give users more clearance around their CPU coolers, while using less power for increased energy efficiency."
Leveraging the industry-leading design and manufacturing capability of Micron Technology, Crucial Ballistix LP memory is backed by a limited lifetime warranty, and is compatible with the latest platforms from Intel and AMD. Crucial Ballistix LP memory is available in a variety of popular DDR3L speeds and up to 8 GB in density for both Crucial Ballistix Sport VLP (very low profile) and Tactical LP models. Crucial Ballistix LP memory modules are available now at www.crucial.com, Amazon.com, Newegg.com, and Tigerdirect.com.
21 Comments on Crucial Unveils Ballistix Low Profile Memory
Other than Micron IC, what other ICs have I seen on Crucial DIMMs? Samsung?
Ergo, these might be Samsung-based?
:rockout:
I have pictures of these sticks, too, of course, and you'll also find Samsung ICs in Crucial SSDs. They have a good working relationship, those two.
The problem is exacerbated when you have all slots filled or are running quad-channel and therefore have size constraints on both sides of the socket.
Then there's the other possibility: building a SFF PC. I've seen multiple SFF builds where it's apparent the builder had to really do some research to find RAM that would physically fit in the space they had available.
You shouldn't have to sacrifice performance in these cases just to get RAM that will actually fit, hence Crucial making these.
The heatspreader on DDR2 and early DDR3 HyperX is a great example of this, the heatspreader is almost twice the height if the RAM itself:
Maybe before posting a smart-ass comment on a news article, next time you'll think about other people's needs, not just your own.
:toast:
I guess if they performed identically to my 4gb modules, id replace two of them with two of these 8gb provided they came in at 1866.
I would know as I brought that Mushkin kit which was in my Sandybride system for a while and everything auto-adjusted through X.M.P with no issues at all, but ironically I ended up replacing them with the greener Samsung kit which appears to be the same RAM as these Crucial Ballistix LP minus the heat shields/coolers. :D
**Correction**
The first who actually made 2133MHz RAM at 1.5v was Corsair who release a 16GB (4x4GB) Dominator kit which was 2133Mhz, CAS: 9-11-10-27, at 1.5v; but the Dominators were and still are expensive and the Mushkin kit I mentioned was merely the first more affordable 2133Mhz kit which ran at 1.5v (possibly the second released kit which was 2133MHz at 1.5v).
I don't read German, but it looks like these overclock just as well as the Samsung Greens (which might be because they are). I'm not sure what basistakt erhö is though. "Baseclock something".