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Whatsup, I put some PC3500 in my CPU yesterday, underclocked to PC3200 because thats as high as my cheezy board goes. But heres my question - I went into my BIOS to make sure it was running at least 3200, but in my BIOS there is only SDRAM settings for 133/166 settings, I set it to auto, but I believe mytflyguy said that it should be at 200 mhz FSB. Am I doing something wrong? (sorry for the humongous sentence)
If your board only supports DDR266 (133 x 2) or DDR333 (166 x 2), then you'll HAVE to overclock it to get PC3200/DDR400 (200 x 2) speeds...or buy a new motherboard that has native support for it.
Hey Burke your right it supports up to 333mhz only. I read the mobo manual and it says it supports up to ddr 3200 / 333mhz.
But 3200 ISNT 333mhz - 333 = 2700 that doesn't make any sense.
Originally posted by TrevGlas Hey Burke your right it supports up to 333mhz only. I read the mobo manual and it says it supports up to ddr 3200 / 333mhz.
But 3200 ISNT 333mhz - 333 = 2700 that doesn't make any sense.
Trev
They may mean you can possibly overclock it that high, or it's a typo error on their part.
Goes like this:
DDR stands for Double Data Rate, so you multiply the acutal speed of the memory by two:
PC2100/DDR266/266 MHz = 133 MHz x 2
PC2700/DDR333/333 MHz = 166 MHz x 2
PC3200/DDR400/400 MHz = 200 MHz x 2
PC3500/DDR433/433 MHz = 216 MHz x 2
If there is no support for DDR400 on your board, you'll have to overclock the memory to the higher speeds (not guaranteed) or get a new board that supports it natively.
Yeah...use the lower timing of 2 unless it starts acting funky. Actually, you'll notice no real-world difference between 2 and 2.5, expect maybe in a tiny bit of difference in benchmarks. But benchmarking isn't indicative of how you really use the computer, so you can't totally go by that.