np :) yep your right.the timings are actually 3-4-3-8.so it can be a little misleading.
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np :) yep your right.the timings are actually 3-4-3-8.so it can be a little misleading.
The C4 with the blue heatspreaders is actually D9GMH?Quote:
Originally Posted by Maxfly
Isn't this in contradiction with all the rumors of them having D9GCT ic's?
How can it be verified?
I've tested both models (C4 and C5) yesterday and i can say that the C5 model (the one i have) is better than C4 (with blue heatspreader).
Firstly C4's don't like more than 2.4v (this is confirmed in two mb's AMD and Intel) while C5's don't have a prob with 2.45v.
Moreover my C5 can do 1075mhz 4-4-4-12 with 2.45 metest stable (not too usual for 800mhz 5-5-5-15 sticks) while C4 could even be fully stable @ 1000mhz 4-4-4-12 with 2.4v (c5 is).
I was thinking of getting the C4's but i've changed my mind... :p:
Seriously?
That's terrible news for me. They only stock C4's.
C4's are great mem too. But at least in my testing i've got the abve mentined results. Maybe i've got a "bad" c4 pair...
im beginning to wonder if they are even using d9s in the c4s anymore.has anyone been able to identify these yet?the set i had were the same thing.Quote:
Originally Posted by krampak
Well, seeing as its the only potential D9GMH ram, I guess I am still going to buy it. I'll have to hope for the best. Hoping for at least 1000MHZ.
I've had the 2G of this; 4-4-4-10, 2.2V, DDR2-1000 :)
that's nice... hmm.... wonder if i'm putting too much into my sticks..
i'm running ddr2-950 @ 4-4-4-10 with 2.3 volts
Quote:
Originally Posted by Maxfly
elpida for sure :confused: :(
what week does everyone have?
mine is week 31...
i sent mine back last week.i dont remember what week they were.gah elpida...man im glad i switched to the crucials now.whew
Do they have a green sticker RoHS on the heatsinks?
mine don't but it says RoHS on the box it came in.
The blue or silver ones?Quote:
Originally Posted by Tulatin
Hmm, if they are Elpida I may have to purchase my ram oversaes. damnit.
I have that memory (2g) @ 4-4-4-9 2.35v 1000mhz on a p5w-dh,e6600@3.6. mine has a white sticker. I got it at new egg about 2 months ago. I like it.
Mines are week 45, and as I've said, they don't like any voltage higher than 2.3V.
The picture is not belongs to Super Talent. Super Talent used super glue, but not the white double side tape (which is showed in the picture) between the blue case HS and IC. There are many different models for the Super Talent 800 series. Each model represents one IC, thus you can not buy different IC with one type of model.Quote:
Originally Posted by krampak
T800UX2GC4 Really is Micron D9 Chips
i am sure !
So which color heatspreader has the D9GMH chips?
Blue or silver?
It may be a different model but it is SuperTalent as I'm krampak...Quote:
The picture is not belongs to Super Talent. Super Talent used super glue, but not the white double side tape (which is showed in the picture) between the blue case HS and IC. There are many different models for the Super Talent 800 series. Each model represents one IC, thus you can not buy different IC with one type of model.
Well.... after some updates, finally I got an answer from supertalent ...
Now the question is.... they use Elpida ? Promos ? Aenon? Infineon? Not more D9 on 800 kits for a while.. that's clear and I have noticed it with my new kit, and if i'm correct, all new kits are now mounted with blue heatsinks, no more silver spreaders on DDR2 800 kits.Quote:
First, we do not specify which chip we use in our Overclocking modules. We specify the clock speed, latency values, and voltage that the modules are tested and guaranteed to operate at. What really matters to customers is what speed the modules can run at, so that's naturally how we specify the modules. But we can use any chip that meets our specifications. Our reasoning for this is simple. When you buy a Super Talent module you're not just buying a bunch of chips on a PCB; you're buying all the testing that we put into the module, and our quality guarantee -- we stand behind the product. The vast majority of our OC modules are capable of running well over their rated specs.
Also, to offer the best possible price and availability we need to be able to qualify multiple chip sources for each module (when possible). We work tirelessly to drive our costs down and improve our availability and lead-times for each product, but we need the flexibility to use more than one chip brand to be competitive. Of course our competitors do the same thing -- they use a variety of chip vendors for their 800MHz parts to drive costs down.
For customers who want the exceptional performance of Micron D9, they can buy our top speed grade modules since currently we use only Micron D9 on our 1000MHz kits. Of course these Micron D9 based modules are considerably more expensive and have very long lead times, so it's not a good volume production product. If you're interested in testing our 1000MHz kits I'm sure we can support you.
If you experienced any issues with our 800MHz kits, I can't imagine why since we haven't seen any quality issues with these kits. Our test process in production is very intensive, and like I said, the majority of our 800MHz kits can run at nearly 900MHz. We'll be glad to replace any bad kit you may have.
You can contact me any time for help with questions or issues. I'll be glad to help in any way I can.
Best Regards,
Joe James
Marketing Director
SuperTalent Technology
www.supertalent.com
that sounds suspiciously like the corsair 6400c4 bs that happened a few weeks ago.switched ics mid week and suddenly a solid d9 module was a junk promos.in this case it looks like a elpida switch.
interesting...
maybe they made a switch a while ago... but used D9's in their earlier production with blue spreaders and then switched to something else later on...
like i said, i have week 31's and can do 475 4-4-4-10