Thursday, November 24th 2011

Exceleram Announces 8 GB DDR3 Module At A Great Price

Exceleram announced a new value-segment 8 GB DDR3 memory module, the E30200A. This no-frills module lacks any heatspreader, because it probably doesn't need it. It can operate at DDR3-1333 MHz (PC3-10700) speed with CAS latency of 9T, and DRAM voltage of 1.5V. More importantly, it is priced at US $49.99 a piece, making 16 GB (2x 8 GB) dual-channel possible at just $99.98. Compare that to the prices of 2x 8 GB kits available on Newegg.

"[The] target for us was to find a solution for our customers to obtain a new 8GB 1333MHz CL9 Memory Module with the price at only US$ 49.99. This price combined with the strong quality level as well as Exceleram always does, it's a really tough target for us to reach. But now we have got the solution, the E30200A Memory Module," said by Steffen Eisenstein, the Product Manager of Exceleram.
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27 Comments on Exceleram Announces 8 GB DDR3 Module At A Great Price

#1
dustyshiv
Wish newegg could ship overseas!!
Posted on Reply
#2
Damn_Smooth
That is pretty cheap for 8GB sticks. It would be good for people that need a high amount of RAM.
Posted on Reply
#3
mustang9
In the Netherlands we already have 16GB at €69.90 for a Quad Channel kit 1600MHz, that would be $95.38 today.
Posted on Reply
#4
Damn_Smooth
mustang9In the Netherlands we already have 16GB at €69.90
That would be $95.38 today.
That's on four sticks though. This is 8GB on 1 stick.
Posted on Reply
#5
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
mustang9In the Netherlands we already have 16GB at €69.90 for a Quad Channel kit 1600MHz, that would be $95.38 today.
Yeah but that's using four 4 GB modules. Find one using two 8 GB modules.
Posted on Reply
#6
mustang9
Damn_SmoothThat's on four sticks though. This is 8GB on 1 stick.
Oh I see, then it is cheap :)
Posted on Reply
#8
Frick
Fishfaced Nincompoop
Moar 8GB sticks! Here all sticks without ECC is above €100. ECC sticks (1333Mhz) can be had for like €70.
Posted on Reply
#9
Trackr
This is 1/10 of the price last year.

What's the catch?
Posted on Reply
#11
btarunr
Editor & Senior Moderator
mtosevoverstock?
Overproduction in the memory industry in general. They got carried away by Intel's "make moar DDR3" cry.
Posted on Reply
#12
Frick
Fishfaced Nincompoop
Soon we can replace our HDD's with Ramdisks. :( :)
Posted on Reply
#13
MikeMurphy
Just when 4gb dimms become commonplace ...
Posted on Reply
#14
L'Eliminateur
so, when are these going to be available in newegg?
Posted on Reply
#15
largon
LGA2011 + eight of these + RAMD software + few SATA3 SSDs in RAID0...
Posted on Reply
#16
Per Hansson
Wow, 64GB of RAM in a LGA2011 mobo for less than 3000SEK?
I am so sold on this!
But please make a 16GB version, 128GB at POST will look just that much better! :)
Posted on Reply
#17
NdMk2o1o
Wonder if these would run comfortably at 1600. It's a good price but only if your going to buy four sticks otherwise you can get 2x 8GB kits with better timings/speed for less (in the UK anyway).
Posted on Reply
#19
Damn_Smooth
hopeshenliehuonice all you, i just join here
Welcome to TPU.
Posted on Reply
#20
hellrazor
FrickSoon we can replace our HDD's with Ramdisks. :( :)
I would much rather just have a program that can load an entire folder into memory and have all the programs use that (like Superfetch, but I get to choose what to put in there), that way we could do that right now.

I'm thinking games, how 'bout you?
Posted on Reply
#21
largon
hellrazorI would much rather just have a program that can load an entire folder into memory and have all the programs use that (like Superfetch, but I get to choose what to put in there), that way we could do that right now.
That's a ramdisk what you described right there.
For example, I use a program called "RamDisk Plus" to do just that. Only 768MB in size though. Mostly as browsers and other progs that use a cache. With these 8GB sticks I'd setup a 20-50GB ramdisk.

My DDR2 ramdisk is slowslowslow.
Posted on Reply
#22
hellrazor
I was thinking more like superfetch with a right-click menu.
Posted on Reply
#23
largon
This is it. It's a virtual disk drive. It automatically loads up at startup from a physical drive and backups itself upon system shutdown.
Posted on Reply
#24
hellrazor
largonThis is it. It's a virtual disk drive. It automatically loads up at startup from a physical drive and backups itself upon system shutdown.
I'm talking about the OS caching a file, not setting up an entire disk inside memory.
Posted on Reply
#25
largon
I fail to see any difference.
Posted on Reply
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