Testing Method & Test Setup
Knowing about Samsung K4B2G0846D HCH9's capabilities from recent
G.Skill TridentX 8GB
review, we armed ourselves with an Ivy Bridge testing platform that
should allow our memory to show every last bit of its overclocking
potential.
To make sure that our figures represent the sort of stability safe to use
ever day, we are going to run each setting until we get a 150% pass of eight
750MB instances of HCI Memtest that is considered one of the toughest memory
stress-tests around.
Motherboard |
ASUS Maximus V Gene (BIOS 1204) |
CPU |
Intel Core i7-3770K @ 4.0 GHz |
Graphic
card |
ASUS GTX 580 |
Memory |
Corsair Dominator Platinum CMD16GX3M4A2666C10 |
HDD |
Intel SSD 330 120 GB |
PSU |
Seasonic Platinum 1000 Watts |
OS |
Windows 7, 64 bit SP1 |
Results
Our processor's IMC isn't HCI Memtest stable above 1'330 MHz
(DDR3-2660) on the memory. Therefore we stopped the testing at 1'330 MHz.
Do I really need to describe? I mean seriously ... This memory kit
is beyond awesomeness.
First of all it achieves specs at only 1.55v and looking at the curve I would
say that at 1.65v the kit is stable around 1'410 MHz (DDR3-2820) CL10.
I mean hello? Even Corsair's fastest kit is rated DDR3-2800 CL11/12-14-14 and
this one does DDR3-2800 CL10-12-12 HCI Memtest stable.
For Samsung chips that's quite an achievement, usually DDR3-2600+ rated memory
kits use Hynix CFR chips. There is some serious binning going behind the curtain.
With a better IMC, this memory kit will fly at CL11 and CL12. Below a screenshot
showing the memory kit passing SuperPi32M computation at 1'400 MHz CL10 1.65v.
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