Conclusion

Corsair has done a great job in bringing DDR 400 2-2-2 memory timings back to the memory market. The Samsung DDR500 chips used in their new 3200XL are very capable of 2-2-2 timings, and not just at DDR400. In our testing, 3200XL performed at 2-2-2 all the way to DDR450. They then went on to DDR500 at the still excellent timings of 2.5-3-3, giving end-users a very wide and useful range of memory performance.

Samsung rates the same memory chips as DDR500 in their DIMMs, but we think that is a very optimistic rating for a DIMM which can barely reach DDR500. The Samsung PC4000 has no headroom over the DDR500 speed, topping out at DDR508. There is no doubt that these memory chips are special, and deserve perhaps a DDR466 rating, but not 500. Corsair's rating of DDR400 2-2-2 with incredible headroom to DDR500 better emphasizes what is really unique and desirable with these new memory chips.

While the Samsung parts did not perform quite as well overall as the Corsair versions, that is more the result of smaller single-sided DIMMs than the inherent superiority of one DIMM over the other. Corsair produces excellent memory and has lavished more attention on the PCB and SPD, but Samsung also has an excellent product in their own memory made with the same memory chips. Also, Corsair paid a bit of a price with their optimized SPD on the latest Socket 939 motherboard benchmarks, where the Samsung overclocked to a significantly higher speed than the Corsair. We expect that this has more to do with the fact that Socket 939 boards were just released, and Corsair will likely have a quick fix to the issues that we found with 3200XL on Socket 939 dual-channel.

You now have 2-2-2 timings as a choice again, and the fact that both OCZ and Mushkin have announced a similar product based on the new Samsung chips means that you will have even more choices in the marketplace. Corsair says that they have committed to the bulk of Samsung's production of the new chips, and only time will tell if 2-2-2 will be mainly a Corsair and Samsung product, or whether other memory makers can also compete with this new memory chip.

The bigger question is how does the new fast memory compare to what you can already buy in the market? The answer is mixed. The new 2-2-2 is not as fast as the discontinued Winbond BH5 in our benchmarks. While we have removed discontinued products from our results, you can easily check earlier reviews and see BH5 is still faster. However, among currently available memory, the new 2-2-2 parts are among the best available, particularly in the DDR400-450 range. Above that sweet spot, from 450 to around 533, OCZ EB series performs faster, and EB is nearly as fast in the 3200XL's best 400-450 range. There is also Kingmax DDR500 Hardcore and OCZ 3700 GOLD Rev. 2, which shadow 3200XL across the entire range and reach even higher at the high end of the range.

There is no doubt that buyers will be impressed with the 2-2-2 ratings of Corsair 3200XL, and they should be. In the DDR400-450 range, it is one of the fastest memories that you can buy. However, it is not a knock-out product that significantly outperforms the best from the competition. It is just another excellent choice. The best range for 3200XL is DDR400 to DDR450. Above this range, performance is still excellent, but there are other memory products that perform better and do nearly as well in the 400 to 450 range.

Corsair has done a great job with 3200XL. If your memory needs are for top performance on Intel from 400 to 450, 3200XL is the top choice. If your overclocking concentrates more on the 450 to 500 range, the 3200 XL is still a good choice, but OCZ EB is a better choice. On the Athlon 64, OCZ3700EB is still a better choice, but that may soon change with Corsair updates to the 3200XL SPD. It is great to have choices in the memory market, and Corsair 3200XL is clearly one of the top memories that you can currently buy. Corsair pioneered this new 2-2-2 memory and even if every other memory maker eventually comes to market with a similar part, Corsair deserves praise for first seeing the potential of the new Samsung PC4000 memory and being the first to market with a new DDR400 2-2-2 product.

Athlon 64 Performance
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  • Ozone1 - Saturday, June 26, 2004 - link

    Maybe I missed it, but in all your memory tests do you guys lower the multipler so that the system remains at a constant speed and then just increase the FSB? If you don't, your reviews would be far more beneficial if you did. Why? Well then it would be easier to see the performance differences when timing changes between the ram. Also, why don't you list the timing for each ram? It just feels like so much is left out of your ram reviews that they don't help me as much as they could... Thoughts?
  • Pumpkinierre - Saturday, June 19, 2004 - link

    Yeah Zvorak your imagination is spot on. But you have to have equal track lenghts (for correct timing) on the Mobo to the DIMM or VLSI unless you use serial transmission ie RAMBUS (which I like). So the closer your chip is to the cpu the harder this will be. Also, remember HT bus is 1000 MB/s which is slow cf. to present bandwidths of 3000MB/s unbuffered. Getting rid of system RAM altogether is the best idea and having a smaller size memory replacing the L2 cache (128Mb would be plenty) running at half cpu speed pumping a large L1 cache 256K would be the way to go. This could be on die or as you suggest a replaceable cpu style chip which would allow upgrades.

  • Zvorak - Friday, June 18, 2004 - link

    Pump, thnx for the open arms... lol

    Aye, I agree with what yur saying about the A64 and the latencies... that was my over all point. Trying to speed up the throughput by increasing timing on the FSB won't do much IMO because the CPU is significantly faster... whereass riding your system of latencies so the memory can operate efficiently and on par with the CPU has shown to improve system performance.

    I truely beleive with "Dual-Channel" memory FSB will become a thing of the past when dealing with tweaking your system... the faster the stick of Memory works internally is most important... but I cannot understand why a new type of memory isnt in the works such as a VLSI 1 gig "chip" that get dropped onto your MB with 2 ns Cas 1-1-1-x that just off the side of the CPU with a dedicated HT bus ...?

    yes.. no ?

    Lets get real... most Systems today are built with 512 or 1g of memory, why not remove the stupid DIMM slot and go with a second processor style slot that you drop in a Ram Chip ...? or am I too forward in my thinking..?

  • Pumpkinierre - Thursday, June 17, 2004 - link

    Sorry Trog #3, I didnt get your remark on the P4. You're advocating using two cpus: a 3.4c and an o'clocked 2.8c at 3.4Gig and seeing the performance improvement of the latter. I was too zonked with a64 thinking. I have seen tests of o'clocked 2.4c@3.2 vs 3.2c when the 800MHz N'woods first came out but I dont know where (might have been AT). The memory could have been at 5:4 or slower RAM timings but from memory the 2.4c still came out on top (I dont know by how much- from visual memory of bar charts it was < 5% dont quote me).

    Yes Wesley #5, it would be interesting. In fact you have already done it once with the OCZ3700EB tests:
    http://www.anandtech.com/memory/showdoc.html?i=205...

    Here, there was only a paltry 3% increase for a 30MHz bus speed increase (~13%) and again not much performance correlation with unbuf.Sandra bandwidth. I think you gotta run your tests at lower video card settings (maybe 16bit) or use an X800 to truly see what is going on with memory latency.

    Welcome to AT Zvorak, I only started posting (initially anonynomously) after my patience with AMD ended with the release of a single expensive heavy cached a64 last September (and I had to yell from the rooftops) despite reading AT for several years previously. Yes some people say what you say about memory timings and o'clocking bus speed but, to me, if the on die memory controller (which runs at cpu speed) is so fast then the bottleneck must be the system RAM. So faster memory latencies and RAM speed should benefit the a64 more so than other cpus eg P4 or A-XP where the Northbridge/ memory controller and RAM run at bus (FSB) speed (with the cpu at a much higher speed). So far only lowering memory latencies seems to do it and raising bus speed doesnt do much, but I have yet to see a comprehensive test on this. Its important because AMD multiplier OVERlock their a64 multipliers (not FXs) and the logic to me of this, is to encourage enthusiasts to increase their bus speeds (without o'clocking too much). Remember when you increase bus speed on a multiplier locked cpu like the P4 or later A-XP you increase both the cpu speed and the memory/NB speed but the a64 allows you to just increase RAM speed while holding cpu speed steady. This is of particular interest to individuals (like me) who are only interested in mild overclocks of their system. Still, cache plays a part in this and probably acts as a buffer especially in predictable apps. and tests. So unless it is something to do with memory controller tuning, it may be that the bus speed effect will be more relevant to the lower cached Paris/Semprons coming out soon or to actual gaming (give me an a64 system and I will let you know!).

    The same arguments are given for the poor performance of encoding tests by the a64s. But the bandwidth tests (which are more relevant to this than demo tests for gaming)show the dual channel a64s to be as good as the P4s(with the quad pumped Netburst architecture) in the unbuffered tests and phenomenal in the buffered tests. People say its other bottlenecks- cache/pipeline thing but that doesnt cut the mustard with me. My belief is that the encoding software is tuned to the P4 architecture so if this were to change then the a64 would be streets ahead. Its quite an interesting and phenomenal cpu yet to realise its full potential. Its a pity it does'nt have Intel behind it.
  • Zvorak - Thursday, June 17, 2004 - link

    Pump, I was under the impression that the A64 wasnt as dependent upon memory timmming as other CPU's .. and increasing the FSB will do very little to memory timing because the controller is on the CPU die... increasing the processor mhz is like OC the memory timing because it scales up with faster MHZ ...no ?

    BTW... my first post here at AT, but been here from the start !!

  • Zvorak - Thursday, June 17, 2004 - link

  • Wesley Fink - Thursday, June 17, 2004 - link

    #4 -
    We ran DDR400 and DDR480 at the fastest timings that were supported at memory speed - primarily to answer the question of whether fast DDR400 is faster than slower-timed but higher speed memory. You bring up an interesting idea of running DDR400 and DDR480 at the same slower timings (2.5-3-3-10 in this case) but the same CPU speed of 2.4GHz (3800+). This would be an interesting set of benchmarks for a future memory review.

    Since the Athlon 64 architecture does not use the same deep pipes used on P4, it is not as dependent on memory bandwidth for performance. It is ironic that the new 939 now has the highest memory bandwidth we have measured on any platform, but doesn't really need the added bandwidth for best performance. Consider it tremendous headroom for future development of the Athlon 64 family.
  • Pumpkinierre - Wednesday, June 16, 2004 - link

    The 8% was referring to the unbuffered Sandra memory bandwidth increase not the actual bus speed increase which is 20%. Again the difference is probably due to the different memory latency timings. I wish Wesley would run the test using the same timings.

    If you increase bus speed, it should decrease latency if all settings stay the same. So it ought to improve performance similarly to lowering memory latency settings. I expected this to be the case for the a64 where the system RAM is the bottleneck. But this doesnt seem to be happening. I've seen only moderate increases (~3%) in the benchmarks with large FSB increases on the A64. It might be that the ondie memory controller is tuned to a particular speed and any bus speed change throws it out of sync. (or it could be the benchmarks-another story!) It tends to poison the purpose of unlocking the multiplier below stock.

    Dont know about the P4, you'd have to get a multiplier unlocked one to test it out (which are pretty rare).
  • TrogdorJW - Wednesday, June 16, 2004 - link

    Ummm... 8% is a little low, Pumpkin. 240 is 20% faster than 200. Still, it's rather surprising that Athlon 64 doesn't seem to care all that much about the added memory bandwidth. Then again, this has been shown to be the case in numerous instances: doubling the L2 cache from the 3000+ to the 3200+ doesn't produce a huge increase in speed, and dual-channel 939 boards are also not much faster than the single-channel 754 parts.

    It would be insteresting to see some results for P4 in the same type of test. I'm sure they're out there, but I haven't looked for them lately. A 2.8C overclocked to a 243 MHz bus would be the equivalent of a 3.4C in clockspeed, with the only difference being the increase in memory bandwidth and FSB speed. Unlike the A64, I'm pretty sure that an overclocked 2.8C would beat the 3.4C in most benchmarks.

    Different strokes for different folks, I s'pose.
  • Pumpkinierre - Tuesday, June 15, 2004 - link

    Errata should be "despite an ~8% increase in mem. bandwidth " in that last paragraph.

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