Trust the Wiki, and the Lemur.
P.S. Dual DDR means double bandwidth availability as you insert two identical DDR RAM modules, instead of a single one.
Trust the Wiki, and the Lemur.
P.S. Dual DDR means double bandwidth availability as you insert two identical DDR RAM modules, instead of a single one.
How about four modules? Can they run in Dual-Channel mode as well?
I'm thinking about one of those new mainboards with four slots and four times 1GB modules, would that result in two modules sharing one channel or so?
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"Topic is tired and needs a nap." - Tosa Inu
As long as they are installed in matched pairs, there's no reason not to run them dual-channel. But as far as the mobo and CPU are concerned, it will still be a situation with two channels, not four.Originally Posted by Husar
I... sort of understood the wiki...Thanks for the reply Lemur... I was getting suspicious about my system underperforming.
So in my current setup (sig), my RAM is effectively causing a bottleneck in my system, is that right?I want to upgrade to 2 GB DDR2 667 dual channel, and those would be the ones labeled with "(2 X 1GB) DDR2"... right?
OR is it simply sticking in 2 sticks and tweaking the BIOS?
EDIT: Oh and do I need some special setup in my motherboard to get this to work? Or do you just plug this in like most RAM sticks? And do I have to set this up in the BIOS or will it automatically run itself dual channel? My board has 4 DDR2 memory slots.
Last edited by Crian; 05-17-2007 at 16:11.
"Why did we attack the Iceni? Why did we destroy that cargo? I can live with being a pawn if the game makes sense!" - Wingman, Mission 3: The Romans Blunder, Freespace 2
Check your motherboard info to make sure that it will support 667 RAM, and you will probably have to change the BIOS settings to run in dual channel mode.
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A man may fight for many things. His country, his friends, his principles, the glistening tear on the cheek of a golden child. But personally, I'd mud-wrestle my own mother for a ton of cash, an amusing clock and a sack of French porn. - Blackadder
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Slug: Thanks and yes, my motherboard supports up to 667 DDR2 and it has up to 4 memory slots. Are dual-channel RAM modules conveniently labeled as such?
"Why did we attack the Iceni? Why did we destroy that cargo? I can live with being a pawn if the game makes sense!" - Wingman, Mission 3: The Romans Blunder, Freespace 2
Dual DDR is not a feature based on RAM module, it's a motherboard-supported feature.
That means if you have one DDR module installed on a Dual-DDR-supporting motherboard, you may start using the technology as soon as you install another RAM module (one which is almost identical with what you have, say, you must have two Twinmos 512 MB DDR RAM 400 MHzs in the end).
But, aware of this dual DDR tech, RAM manufacturers offer Dual Pack RAM modules, two identical modules in one package to make use of Dual DDR error-free.
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