Usually we are showing you here how a certain memory scales with increased voltage. But after a while of testing it became clear that this memory does not benefit from increasing voltage or changing the timings. Pretty much our sample always ran at 213-215 MHz, no matter the voltage. Relaxing timings did not help the overclock either. We tried voltages from 2.6V up to 2.9V and timings up to 3-4-4-8.
With this memory it is best if you run it at the best timings possible because there is nothing to be gained from relaxing them.
The last test "JEDEC DDR-400A" is for comparison with a generic DDR module running at JEDEC standard timings.
G.SKILL F1-3200PHU2-2GBNS PC3200
CPU Clock & Memory Ratio
Memory Speed
Memory Timings
Everest Read
Everest Write
Everest Latency
Quake 3 Timedemo
3DMark 2001SE
SuperPi Mod 1M
9 x 200 1:1
200 MHz
2.5-3-3-6 2.6V
5345 MB/s
2144 MB/s
51.7 ns
255.1 fps
20182
46.60 s
9 x 213 1:1
213 MHz
2.5-3-3-6 2.6V
5648 MB/s
2133 MB/s
48.9 ns
270.0 fps
21208
43.99 s
9 x 214 1:1
214 MHz
2.5-3-3-6 2.8V
5714 MB/s
2243 MB/s
48.8 ns
271.3 fps
21243
43.75 s
9 x 215 1:1
215 MHz
3-3-3-6 2.8V
5620 MB/s
2154 MB/s
49.0 ns
271.2 fps
21118
43.63 s
JEDEC DDR-400A
200 MHz
2.5-3-3-8 2.6V
5314 MB/s
2123 MB/s
52.1 ns
255.1 fps
20162
46.61 s
For easier comparison with other modules, we set the maximum voltage required for the best result (here 2.8V; max 3.1V) and tested until we found the highest clock frequency and fastest timings for this memory. The benchmarks Everest Read, Everest Write and Quake 3 were run. We then calculated the performance increase in percent compared to some standard DDR-400 memory running at JEDEC standard timings (2.5-3-3-8). The average percentage of the three benchmarks is listed in following table: