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    PC3200 worth it?

    Discussion in 'HP' started by Mr. Hollywood, Jan 12, 2006.

  1. Mr. Hollywood

    Mr. Hollywood Notebook Enthusiast

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    A gig of pc2700 is about $30 less than pc3200 of the same amount. Is it worth it to put the faster ram in there if you dont use the laptop for much of anything except word processing and maybe some kind of light gaming. I read that itll give you like 15% performance increase. This is for a V2000z.
     
  2. chinna_n

    chinna_n Notebook Deity NBR Reviewer

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    Yes, it give around 15% improvement including Video( for gaming). There is not price difference for 512MB sticks. OCZ 512MB DDR400 stick are only $40 each. for 1GB you spend only $80. I do not think you are getting any good DDR333 memory cheaper than that.
     
  3. lappyhappy

    lappyhappy Notebook Deity

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    For what you are using your laptop for there is probably no reason to spring for the 3200 memory. It is entirely up to you as to whether 15% faster would be beneficial to you or not.
     
  4. dagamer34

    dagamer34 Notebook Evangelist NBR Reviewer

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    More RAM is usually better than faster RAM since overclocking is impossible in most laptops. I wouldn't really get the faster RAM for $30, since "light gaming" means you don't really care if you get 100FPS, as long as the game is playable. The performance increase won't really be all that noticeable anyway.
     
  5. meerkat

    meerkat Notebook Enthusiast

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    Yeah, I agree the mem speed impact is pretty limited in practical use. For typical use, a faster ram gives you half second faster advantage (only after lengthy cpu intensive task, if any). But such use case only happens less than 1% of your computer use time on average. A faster ram is more to meet pschological gratification.

    As for gaming, it does help some but laptop gaming sucks in general, "better" really means instead of score C, you get a C++, do you really care?

    Since you have a ram that comes with manufacture, which most probably a PC2700, getting a PC3200 only means you either have to run PC3200 as PC2700 (along with the manufacture one) or you have to dump the PC2700 in order to run the new pc3200 at PC3200. That memory size loss does not cover the speed increase.

    Even you sell the PC2700 on ebay for profit that does not cover your time spent on packaging & shipping IMHO.

    Having said the above, from time to time, you may find a 1G PC3200 not necessarily expensive than a 1G PC2700.
     
  6. Mr. Hollywood

    Mr. Hollywood Notebook Enthusiast

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    Where is 1GB for $80?
     
  7. tpm12

    tpm12 Notebook Enthusiast

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    Can you switch from 2700 to something higher...I thought if you system was built with one that's what you are stuck with...mine is and AMD 3200 that has 1gig of PC2700...can I go up in speed?
     
  8. chinna_n

    chinna_n Notebook Deity NBR Reviewer

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    I do not know, why you are guys are so lazy to search the forum! I have given the newegg link for OCZ DDR400 for $40 in quite few places in this forum.

    It is on sale on newegg.com 512MB for $40.

    Please go and look for that on newegg.
     
  9. tempoct

    tempoct Notebook Consultant

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    I think he means 1GB = 2x512MB. I got mine $100 shipped (2x512MB Corsair CAS3 :p, should have got OCZ cas 2.5, was reading some where that someone has problem with the OCZ).
    Check out newegg.com or monarchcomputer.com
    or check out fatwallet.com and techbargains.com

     
  10. D3X

    D3X the robo know it all

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    For the Turion, yes it's worth it!

    The reason is that the Turion actually runs at the frequency of 200FSB. Since DDR PC3200 runs at 200FSB, that would make the memory and the CPU run syncronous with each other = more memory bandwidth. If you run PC2700 it would run at 166FSB, therefore slower in performance (15% decrease) from what it's supposed to be.
     
  11. fill2k

    fill2k Notebook Consultant

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    The processor is designed so that it can use up to PC3200 memory. So pretty much any DDR module slower the PC3200 will work. However, if you want to run memory modules beyond PC3200, then you would have to overclock, but that is another subject.

    The trick is all memory modules plugged in will run at the same speed... so if you have modules of different speeds plugged in, then it will only run at whatever the speed of your slowest module.
     
  12. fill2k

    fill2k Notebook Consultant

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    I tend to agree... that's why I run my system at DDR333, even though i ordered a DDR400 module (1x 1GB DDR400 & 1x 256MB DDR333). More RAM is more important for me than speed.

    However, with the prices to DDR333 very close to DDR400, why not buy DDR400... in some cases the DDR400 is even cheaper than the DDR333.

    so unless you're in really really tight budget, buy the DDR400.
     
  13. unseen

    unseen Notebook Enthusiast

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    Okay wut do u think? 1.5 gigz running at 333Mhz or 1 gig running at 400Mhz.
     
  14. chinna_n

    chinna_n Notebook Deity NBR Reviewer

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    No, there are no problem with OCZ DDR400 for V2000z model. As I mentioned before, it has been used and tested by our forum members in V2000z and we even have CPUz pics in my review posted.
     
  15. chinna_n

    chinna_n Notebook Deity NBR Reviewer

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    I think there is some confusion here.

    Let me try to clarify things somewhat.

    1. Every application is benifited by running RAM DDR400 speed

    2. Having more DDR333 RAM only helps when application really needs that much memory. I see many people claiming 1.25GB DDR333 faster than 1GB DDR400. How many applications use more than 1GB in Win XP, to be frank hardly any. If you see recent Tomshardware testing about how much RAM you needs, 1GB is saturation point for all current applications. There is no advantage after that(Unless you have some specific memory hog applications).

    Having 1GB of DDR400 helps accross spectrum from Video games to Video encoding to even code compiling, ofcourse only 15%, but having 1.25GB of DDR400 RAM does not help at all, that 0% for 95% applications.
     
  16. xAMDvsIntelx

    xAMDvsIntelx Notebook Deity

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    I agree - for more noticable performance gains, you'll have to upgrade by at least 512MB. The more you add, the more noticable the performance gains will be.
     
  17. Soul814

    Soul814 Notebook Consultant

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    theres no one stick for 1gb, its 2x512 for $80 or 1x1gb for $130

    I ordered my notebook and its build date is 1/18 so i got about 6 days left to wait and decide what to get. I ordered a L2000, I upgrade the ram to 1x512mb so I'm going to use their stock one. The speeds will be DDR333 because I will be using the old and the new stick so should I get the DDR400?
     
  18. Mr. Hollywood

    Mr. Hollywood Notebook Enthusiast

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    Are the Corsair 512 sticks from newegg ok? Or should OCZ be the one since its CAS is 2.5? Theres a comment in the product review section about the corsair that says this.

    Comments: I bought 2 sticks and it works great on my Compaq V2000Z. The only problem is that my notebook runs the memory at CAS 3 and not 2.5 like it should.

    Reviewed By: j0hn00, 9/29/2005 6:05:50 PM

    OCZ wont have this problem? Do you have to use A64tweaker to get everything working like it should?
     
  19. chinna_n

    chinna_n Notebook Deity NBR Reviewer

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    Guys, I do not know, what is going on! I clearly mentioned several times before Corsair DDR400 is not CAS 2.5, it is CAS 3 ( I have it) as per the SPD timings, so it run at CAS 3.
    And Corsair does not support CAS 2.5 even if you use A64Tweaker. It simply crashes because memory is not designed for that. ( I already tried that).

    But OCZ is CAS 2.5 as spec says, and it is being used by few members and it is CAS 2.5 ( see my review it has snapshots also).

    So, just buy OCZ if you want faster cheaper ram in this case.
     
  20. tempoct

    tempoct Notebook Consultant

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    I confirm what Chinna said here.
    I order the RAM before I found the confirmation messages about the compatilbility with OCZ with v2000z. Also, the Corsair is actually running cas 3, not 2.5.
    Anyway, I don't think CAS2.5 vs CAS3.0 is that much of the different. Especially, compared between DDR400 and DDR333.

     
  21. meerkat

    meerkat Notebook Enthusiast

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    Whether RAM size is more important or RAM speed has no correct unique answer, as it depends on how you use your computer most of the time. Plus, given a specific user habit (for example for RAM speed centric user), RAM size becomes more important when less than 512M. And vice versa.

    I believe for many the user, a ram of 512-1G RAM, neither speed or bigger size is important – for quite some users.

    But from pragmatic point of view, typically ram size has more important for me than speed.

    · Faster ram will affect me only when speed is bottleneck, which seldom is the case. Not for word processing, for compiling therotically yes, practically no (hard drive speed and fragmentation status places WAY bigger factor than ram speed, but a migger RAM size will reduce tmp file swapping). For gaming, ram speed is a plus. For multimedia, surprisingly no, see later.

    · Nowadays, no OS is running a single application, they co share the memory, so even an application does not take that much RAM does not means the system does not need that many.

    · You think an application does not use 100% ram means it does not need so much? Not necessarily true. For quite some decent applications, they only reserve portion of physical RAM for their own data use, and left the rest for system or other application use. For example, photoshop CS2 by default use only 55% of physical RAM (and hope it is continguous, which smaller RAM seldom garantee this), if not enough, it use scratch disk (use our OS terminology, it is swapping). So you already get the performance penalty even though you see the RAM still has lots of free blocks. Plus more RAM means more than you may think, see here.
    · For video editing, encoding is with slower RAM is actually not a hassle for me typically, but size is. The reason being, encoding is pretty much CPU intensive and lengthy process, so I seldom wait there or I do not mind waiting 5 more sends for a 20 minutes (typically longer) encoding. But I do mind the slowness when I do the video editing (before the final encoding). Typically, when I do a transition or effects, I need to see in real time if it is really what I want, so I need a realtime rendering. Many application, premiere, vegas, or after effects render the effects to RAM, which is a big memory hog, plus remember, they all only use the portion of physical RAM they reserved before they have to use a much slower disk.

    As I said, there is no right answer, but I found more people in various occasions, RAM size is more matter.

    Just my 2 cent.
     
  22. fill2k

    fill2k Notebook Consultant

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    I agree with Meerkat.

    In my case I use my system with Lotus Notes(with it's companion applications). Company where I work for has a Notes based application which easily has 30 Notes databases.

    Notes is not a CPU intensive application(except for occasional background process), but Notes with the database views. view indeces, etc, is a memory hog. Aside from Lotus Notes, I have several Sysadmin apps loaded at the same time.

    I don't game, nor do video editing with my laptop, I have my A64 Desktop with Dual Channel for that purpose. So in my case, memory size is important.

    Like I said in the past, I really think it depends on your budget. Prices are so close between the DDR333 & DDR400, it almost doesn't matter anymore... if your system supports DDR400, and you can afford the "little" price premium, get DDR400.
     
  23. chinna_n

    chinna_n Notebook Deity NBR Reviewer

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    Meerkat,

    One thing I agree is, size does matter when your RAM is less than 1GB(not for all app though). That is what I explained. I use Pinnacle studio, Ulead Video Studio and Paintship pro along with Servers apps I use. None of those benifitted with RAM more than 1GB. Infact I removed 512MB from desktop to make it 1GB, so that latencies are little better and I saw some improvement in encoding.

    As I stated before, Check the Tomshardware article, they have tested almost all kind of applications (Including photoshop I remember), gaming etc.It clearly shows, there is no improvement after 1GB of RAM for 95% applications( that includes Pinnacle).

    When I check how much memory my applications are using, I also check to see if my swap memory has been increased, but that hasn't been the case.

    Yes, in word editing you may not see any difference, but you see difference in gaming, video encoding and quite few applications benifit from DDR400 RAM, ofcourse is it worth $100 more? no, I do not think so, but is it worth $25 more, yes. Actually price is almost same for DDR400 and DDR333 for all major manufacturers.
     
  24. Fosters

    Fosters Newbie

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    i have 2gb of ram in my desktop, and i'm tempted to upgrade to 4gb. I tend to work and play at the same time, running world of warcraft and query analyzer at the same time. since the laptop runs wow just fine, that's already 800-900 megs of ram used right there. query analyzer, depending on what kind of recordsets i'm returning, can go anywhere from 100 megs used to 3gb... (not pretty)

    my view on it, if you're gonna upgrade the ram, esp going with 1gb sticks, get the 400mhz ones. if you have the stock 333 mhz 256 modules, and wondering if it's worth keeping one, unless you're on the very verge of 1gb not being enough, then junk it and run the thing at 400 mhz, as 256 isn't gonna make a diff. 1gb at 400mhz vs 1.5gb at 333mhz is a more serious comparisson though (to answer another poster's question) and really depends on what you're running. if it's just regular web browsing, email and whatnot, 1gb at 400mhz is sufficient. if you're running memory intensive stuff, you should be better off with the 1.5gb.

    faster memory makes a huge impact, but when you run out of it, the hard drive is a heck of a lot slower than even slow memory.
     
  25. meerkat

    meerkat Notebook Enthusiast

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    I do not understand how this proves you have enough memory.

    1. When swapping happens, swap size reserved by the system does not increase. A stable sized swap region may means none or frequent swapping. swap sizes increases only when the reserved swap region is no longer big enough too, meaning, the memory is not just short, but badly short.

    2. High performace applications (written by a startup company that rush to the market for 1.x release is an exception) do their own memory management. On start up, they allocate one or few chunk of region (memory partition) from system pool. Such chunk size is in portion to the size of physical RAM. Application then do it's own memory management inside the the chunk of region. When in shortage, these applications do their own smarter swapping. These activities are transparent to the OS, so the OS never understand or report such thing as swapping.

    Using system swap activities as reference never tell you the whole story behind the scence. Many many multimedia applications, database etc fall to such scenario. If you never feel any slow down in such case, you won't feel the slow memory speed I bet.

    So,
    may happens even when the system still has free RAM.

    3. Tom hardware report has to be tested in a isolated environment (otherwise, it is hard to make any judgement due to too many factors weighing in).

    I believe the claim that photoshop does not need big memory is either a false memory or a Tom's joke. (Unless the tester only use PS to edit icon or simply open then close image).

    Even when you edit a single image in PS, every action that modifies pixels results in a image snapshot (so that you can undo -- roll back upto 99 steps). Such thing are memory hungry when retouch a image. (unlike text based word, that only need to record the delta part of change).

    Also, layer is heart and soul for PS, if Tom tester ever touch this ball and play with it, he knows what it means to the memory, the mem size is displayed on the left bottom status bar.

    [re-edited]
    I have to be fair to PS's need on memory. Yes, it needs a lot of memory, on the other hand, when shortage results in disk swapping, it is not as bad as some other application. It is people who interactive with computer. People's slowness plus operation on a still image is nottoo big deal on non-real-time response. Living with small RAM may bearable.
     
  26. Fosters

    Fosters Newbie

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    True, that only means the swap file is big enough :)

    simple memory test for me, do a select * from [tablename] (nolock); brings back all the records from a specific table, at full sql server/network speed... do that in query analyzer with text output (which for some stupid reason takes more memory than grid output, good job MS) on a table with 50+ mil records, and you'll see just about when you run out of ram. stop it, see how many records it's gotten from the server, and figure out if i can work with that (my desktop can get about 20 mil rows before it runs out of ram and starts swapping for example) I can work with that, i wont ever need that much purely for sql, but it's good to have a safety net. my laptop, in it's current state, 512 mb ram and 128 taken by the vid card, is in a much worse scenario. I havent ran the "test" yet because i can't add the laptop to the domain (just found out that's one feature they took out in xp home...), but as soon as i do, i'll figure out how it compares to the desktop/how much more ram do i really need.

    Another memory hog program that i love playing with is VMware. run up two instances of windows 2000 server and you're bound to need more than 1gb ram. awesome tool when you need a quick webserver and sql server for a quick app.
     
  27. Mr. Hollywood

    Mr. Hollywood Notebook Enthusiast

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    Well I ordered 2 sticks of OCZ 512MB PC 3200. 1GB should be fine for my uses and itll be a little bit quicker.
     
  28. Soul814

    Soul814 Notebook Consultant

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    thats cool =) i didnt have money so i ordered 1gb pc3200 sodimm 200pin ocz =D lol n im going to use 512mb hp stock ram, which means my speeds going down =( but its okay I guess till I have more money