imperialreign
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System Name | УльтраФиолет |
---|---|
Processor | Intel Kentsfield Q9650 @ 3.8GHz (4.2GHz highest achieved) |
Motherboard | ASUS P5E3 Deluxe/WiFi; X38 NSB, ICH9R SSB |
Cooling | Delta V3 block, XPSC res, 120x3 rad, ST 1/2" pump - 10 fans, SYSTRIN HDD cooler, Antec HDD cooler |
Memory | Dual channel 8GB OCZ Platinum DDR3 @ 1800MHz @ 7-7-7-20 1T |
Video Card(s) | Quadfire: (2) Sapphire HD5970 |
Storage | (2) WD VelociRaptor 300GB SATA-300; WD 320GB SATA-300; WD 200GB UATA + WD 160GB UATA |
Display(s) | Samsung Syncmaster T240 24" (16:10) |
Case | Cooler Master Stacker 830 |
Audio Device(s) | Creative X-Fi Titanium Fatal1ty Pro PCI-E x1 |
Power Supply | Kingwin Mach1 1200W modular |
Software | Windows XP Home SP3; Vista Ultimate x64 SP2 |
Benchmark Scores | 3m06: 20270 here: http://hwbot.org/user.do?userId=12313 |
It doesn't go quite like that. All SDRAM-DDR irregardless of the generation move the exact same amount of data bits per clock cycle. What makes the difference is DDR2 has higher freq (= more clock cycles per second) than DDR1. And DDR3 pushes even more. And since the length of a clock cycle shortens when frequency goes up, latencies don't become a problem.
damn . . . y'know, I still get confused sometimes as to the intricacies of DRAM operations
although, I still rest by my earlier example and bench that I posted showing that solid mid-range DDR3 can tangle with some of the best DDR2 offerings. Yeah, I've seen DDR2 pull some better read/write latencies at lower clock settings; but considering my timings, and the very, very mild OC (1600-stock vs 1800-OC), there's still a fathom of potential left.
Now, I just need to go liquid cooling so I can start fiddling further with 4GHz+ CPU clocks
DDR4?!? WTF! What happened to just going to DDR5?!?
LoL, sorry no one else had done it yet ; )
I'm suprised they are putting DDR4 that far out. With so much hype with DDR5 on GPUs.
well . . . technically, there are slight differences between SYS DRAM and GPU DRAM. it's nothing dramatic, really, but the differences equate to GDRAM being developed for use and access by GPUs; they respond faster, tend to be more efficient and are capable of running at much faster speeds than their equivalent SYS DRAM components. The biggest difference between the two varieties, is that GDDR# can turn on a MEM bank and read from it within the same clock cycle, whereas SYS DDR# can't.
Otherwise GDDR# operates at a theorhetical level the same as DDR#.