Kingston Triple-Channel KHX2000C9AD3W1K3/6GX

Published by Roger Tanner on 29.06.11
Page:
« 1 2 3 (4) 5 6 »

Test Setup

Motherboard ASUS Rampage III Extreme
CPU Intel Core i7 980X
Graphic card ATI Radeon HD 4850
Memory Kingston KHX2000C9AD3W1K3/6GX
HDD Western Digital 360
PSU Corsair 1000 Watt
OS Windows 7, 64 bit


We were thinking a lot about how to test memory in a way that one can come up with a qualitative conclusion rather than a quantitative one. Our goal is to be able to comment on the memory kits quality. Furthermore, standard performance tests with memory do not have any significance at all. This is because almost the only thing you're measuring is the error in measurement.

What we do instead of performance tests are "scaling test". First we start with the standard voltage and increase the frequency until the system becomes unstable. To test the stability we use MaxxMem. Then we increase the voltage by 0.025 Volt and again we increase the memory frequency until the system becomes unstable. This we repeat until we reach 1.85 Volt.

Using this method one can do statements on the modules potential and on the quality of the chips used. Generally you can say the lower the voltage needed for high overclocking results the better the chips.

Page 1 - Introduction Page 4 - Test Setup
Page 2 - Preview Page 5 - Results
Page 3 - Technical Details Page 6 - Conclusion


Discuss this article in the forums




Navigate through the articles
Previous article Corsair Dominator GT 2133 CL9 Kingston Dual-Channel-Kit KHX2000C9AD3W1K2/4GX Next article
comments powered by Disqus

Kingston Triple-Channel KHX2000C9AD3W1K3/6GX - Memory > DDR3 - Reviews - ocaholic