I will be doing a first build based on the Intel D875 PBZ motherboard:
http://www.intel.com/design/motherbd/bz/index.htm
I will be running an All in wonder TV/ Capture card, Audigy 2 Platinum Ex and will use as a home entertainment center. Keep my music on the hard drive, record from TV, digitize my tapes and albums, share media with other computers on a home network, play with video editing and sound recording etc.
Probably an Intel 2.4c 800 mhz fsb cpu. 200 gb Western digital drive ( May add in SATA RAID 0 array in a year or so). Win XP Pro.
Don?t care much about extreme gaming. Would prioritize stability and minimize tweaking and tech support calls, though would like to get whatever reasonable performance gains I can. Multitasking efficiency would be a plus with the new hyperthreading feature. Price is a consideration, of course, though it is worth paying something for ease, quality or future upgradeability.
Soooooo? Memory is the last decision I have to make. My first hunch is to put in a gig (2 x 512) of medium quality Intel tested PC 3200 memory, run at standard timings. Perhaps Crucial or Kingston Value Ram. Though I now can?t imagine ever needing more than a gig, this would leave two more slots for future expansion. ( I do plan to keep this about as long as I can eke it out?)
My questions:
1. Anandtech had a review of the 875 p chipset memory and reported that the fastest set up was to have all four slots set up with matched double sided dimms.
http://www.anandtech.com/memory/showdoc.html?i=1839&p=8
Should I go with 4 x 256 mb pc3200 modules? I could actually start with 2 and then add the other two when memory prices come down. ( Are they gonna in the next 6 months?) This strategy assumes that I would never want more than a gig in there. How much an improvement over 2 x 512 might this be? I didn?t quite get that from the Anandtech article.
2.I have checked the Intel website and they link to memory they have tested in house and also memory they have given to CMTLabs for independent testing:
http://www.intel.com/design/motherbd/bz/bz_mem.htm
The Kingston and Crucial are the most readily available 512 modules on those lists (Crucial is listed as Micron, but I believe it is the same memory). But users report success ( and sometimes headaches!) with other brands of faster and somewhat more expensive memory. Should I consider the likes of Corsair or Mushkin or Geil or Kingston HyperX ? This intel board is supposedly somewhat limited in its ability to overclock or tweak memory ( though there is the Intel supplied ?burn in mode? utility with the 4% boost and the BIOS does allow you to change some memory settings? ).
3. If I should even consider something not on the Intel list, at what price point does the better quality memory lose any bang for the buck validity? Eg. If the Gig of memory costs $40 more, would I be better off just getting a 2.6c processor instead? Or would 512 mb of the fancy stuff be better than 1 gb of the middle of the road stuff for some reason?
Here are some examples of stuff off the web. Prices include shipping and handling but not tax.
CT6464Z40B Crucial 512 mb $ 94.99 From Crucial.com ($95.00 NEW Egg OEM)
Module Details:
 Module Size: 512MB
 Package: 184-pin DIMM
 Feature: DDR PC3200
 Configuration: 64Meg x 64
 DIMM Type: Unbuffered
 Error Checking: Non-parity
 Speed: 5ns
 Voltage: 2.5V
 SDRAM Timings:CL=3
Crucial CT3264Z40B 256 mb $54.99 ( New Egg $54 OEM)
Kingson 512mb (2x256mb) DDR400 PC3200, Model KVR400X64C3AK2/512 (New Egg $100)
3.3.3
Kingston 1024MB Kit ( 2x512MB ) PC3200 DDR 400Mhz ( KVR400X64C3AK2/1G ) CL3 - Retail
Essen Computers $199.89
KINGSTON KVR400X64C3/512 512MB 400MHz DDR PC3200 DIMM RAM CL3 (New Egg $99)
KINGSTON HyperX Series 184-pin 1GB Kit (2x 512MB) DDR400 (PC3200) DDR RAM modules, Model# KHX3200K2/1G New Egg $270
CORSAIR MEMORY Kit 512MBx2 PC3200 VALUE SELECT. DDR RAM - OEM
Specifications
This Kit Contains 2 Matched 512MB Modules, for 1GB Total Memory Model#: VS1GBKIT40
$196 New Egg
CORSAIR MEMORY XMS Extreme Memory Speed Series 512MB 64MX64 PC-3200C2PT With Platinum - Silver Heat Spreader OEM
Specifications:
Speed 400 MHz
Organization 64M x 64
CAS Latency 2-3-3-6-T1
Memory type DDR
Part number: CMX512-3200C2PT
NE $128.50
GEIL DDR RAM 512MB PC-3200 Value 400MHz Ultra- CAS 2.5, 2T CommandGL5123200B Value. DDR400, CAS 2.5
New Egg $91plus tax
Mushkin 512MB PC3200 DDR SDRAM DIMM Memory
Model: 990930 $105 @ best buy
2.5-4-4 @ 400MHz ? 3.2GB/s Dual Bank ? 64Mx64 Module 32Mx8 chip density Cool Blue 6-Layer PCB 184pin 2.5V Unbuffered ? Heatspreader $109 at mushkin same stuff (800-569-1868)
KingMax DDR memory 512MB PC3200- OEM
Specifications:
Performance range - 400MHz ( DDR400, CL2.5 )
Double-data-rate architecture; two data transfers per clock cycle
Auto & self refresh capability (4096 Cycles / 64ms)
Single 2.5V ±0.2V power supply Programmable Read latency 2, 2.5 (clock)
Programmable Burst length (2, 4, 8) Model#: MPXC22D-38 -OEM
NE $92 incl S/H
Anyway, I am open to any comments or suggestions. If I go as what I perceive as the middle of the road path, I would either get the Kingston 1024MB Kit ( 2x512MB ) PC3200 DDR 400Mhz KVR400X64C3A at Essen computers or buy the CT6464Z40B Crucial 512 mb $ 94.99 From Crucial.com. Wondering if support and returns would be better from Crucial directly. I like Newegg, but they didn?t have the A version of the Kingston KVR series that seems to be slightly better.
If I go non-standard cheap, the Best Buy Mushkin 512 3200 for $105 seems interesting ( though the Mushkin site has it on sale for $109 now) Think it is their mid level Blue line.
Beyond that, the Corsair gets a bit confusing for me and am not sure if it is worth it on this board. The LL series is $156 for the 512 at New Egg.
Thanks for any comments.
Kevin Mogg
http://www.intel.com/design/motherbd/bz/index.htm
I will be running an All in wonder TV/ Capture card, Audigy 2 Platinum Ex and will use as a home entertainment center. Keep my music on the hard drive, record from TV, digitize my tapes and albums, share media with other computers on a home network, play with video editing and sound recording etc.
Probably an Intel 2.4c 800 mhz fsb cpu. 200 gb Western digital drive ( May add in SATA RAID 0 array in a year or so). Win XP Pro.
Don?t care much about extreme gaming. Would prioritize stability and minimize tweaking and tech support calls, though would like to get whatever reasonable performance gains I can. Multitasking efficiency would be a plus with the new hyperthreading feature. Price is a consideration, of course, though it is worth paying something for ease, quality or future upgradeability.
Soooooo? Memory is the last decision I have to make. My first hunch is to put in a gig (2 x 512) of medium quality Intel tested PC 3200 memory, run at standard timings. Perhaps Crucial or Kingston Value Ram. Though I now can?t imagine ever needing more than a gig, this would leave two more slots for future expansion. ( I do plan to keep this about as long as I can eke it out?)
My questions:
1. Anandtech had a review of the 875 p chipset memory and reported that the fastest set up was to have all four slots set up with matched double sided dimms.
http://www.anandtech.com/memory/showdoc.html?i=1839&p=8
Should I go with 4 x 256 mb pc3200 modules? I could actually start with 2 and then add the other two when memory prices come down. ( Are they gonna in the next 6 months?) This strategy assumes that I would never want more than a gig in there. How much an improvement over 2 x 512 might this be? I didn?t quite get that from the Anandtech article.
2.I have checked the Intel website and they link to memory they have tested in house and also memory they have given to CMTLabs for independent testing:
http://www.intel.com/design/motherbd/bz/bz_mem.htm
The Kingston and Crucial are the most readily available 512 modules on those lists (Crucial is listed as Micron, but I believe it is the same memory). But users report success ( and sometimes headaches!) with other brands of faster and somewhat more expensive memory. Should I consider the likes of Corsair or Mushkin or Geil or Kingston HyperX ? This intel board is supposedly somewhat limited in its ability to overclock or tweak memory ( though there is the Intel supplied ?burn in mode? utility with the 4% boost and the BIOS does allow you to change some memory settings? ).
3. If I should even consider something not on the Intel list, at what price point does the better quality memory lose any bang for the buck validity? Eg. If the Gig of memory costs $40 more, would I be better off just getting a 2.6c processor instead? Or would 512 mb of the fancy stuff be better than 1 gb of the middle of the road stuff for some reason?
Here are some examples of stuff off the web. Prices include shipping and handling but not tax.
CT6464Z40B Crucial 512 mb $ 94.99 From Crucial.com ($95.00 NEW Egg OEM)
Module Details:
 Module Size: 512MB
 Package: 184-pin DIMM
 Feature: DDR PC3200
 Configuration: 64Meg x 64
 DIMM Type: Unbuffered
 Error Checking: Non-parity
 Speed: 5ns
 Voltage: 2.5V
 SDRAM Timings:CL=3
Crucial CT3264Z40B 256 mb $54.99 ( New Egg $54 OEM)
Kingson 512mb (2x256mb) DDR400 PC3200, Model KVR400X64C3AK2/512 (New Egg $100)
3.3.3
Kingston 1024MB Kit ( 2x512MB ) PC3200 DDR 400Mhz ( KVR400X64C3AK2/1G ) CL3 - Retail
Essen Computers $199.89
KINGSTON KVR400X64C3/512 512MB 400MHz DDR PC3200 DIMM RAM CL3 (New Egg $99)
KINGSTON HyperX Series 184-pin 1GB Kit (2x 512MB) DDR400 (PC3200) DDR RAM modules, Model# KHX3200K2/1G New Egg $270
CORSAIR MEMORY Kit 512MBx2 PC3200 VALUE SELECT. DDR RAM - OEM
Specifications
This Kit Contains 2 Matched 512MB Modules, for 1GB Total Memory Model#: VS1GBKIT40
$196 New Egg
CORSAIR MEMORY XMS Extreme Memory Speed Series 512MB 64MX64 PC-3200C2PT With Platinum - Silver Heat Spreader OEM
Specifications:
Speed 400 MHz
Organization 64M x 64
CAS Latency 2-3-3-6-T1
Memory type DDR
Part number: CMX512-3200C2PT
NE $128.50
GEIL DDR RAM 512MB PC-3200 Value 400MHz Ultra- CAS 2.5, 2T CommandGL5123200B Value. DDR400, CAS 2.5
New Egg $91plus tax
Mushkin 512MB PC3200 DDR SDRAM DIMM Memory
Model: 990930 $105 @ best buy
2.5-4-4 @ 400MHz ? 3.2GB/s Dual Bank ? 64Mx64 Module 32Mx8 chip density Cool Blue 6-Layer PCB 184pin 2.5V Unbuffered ? Heatspreader $109 at mushkin same stuff (800-569-1868)
KingMax DDR memory 512MB PC3200- OEM
Specifications:
Performance range - 400MHz ( DDR400, CL2.5 )
Double-data-rate architecture; two data transfers per clock cycle
Auto & self refresh capability (4096 Cycles / 64ms)
Single 2.5V ±0.2V power supply Programmable Read latency 2, 2.5 (clock)
Programmable Burst length (2, 4, 8) Model#: MPXC22D-38 -OEM
NE $92 incl S/H
Anyway, I am open to any comments or suggestions. If I go as what I perceive as the middle of the road path, I would either get the Kingston 1024MB Kit ( 2x512MB ) PC3200 DDR 400Mhz KVR400X64C3A at Essen computers or buy the CT6464Z40B Crucial 512 mb $ 94.99 From Crucial.com. Wondering if support and returns would be better from Crucial directly. I like Newegg, but they didn?t have the A version of the Kingston KVR series that seems to be slightly better.
If I go non-standard cheap, the Best Buy Mushkin 512 3200 for $105 seems interesting ( though the Mushkin site has it on sale for $109 now) Think it is their mid level Blue line.
Beyond that, the Corsair gets a bit confusing for me and am not sure if it is worth it on this board. The LL series is $156 for the 512 at New Egg.
Thanks for any comments.
Kevin Mogg