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Specifications:
The default speed on this memory is 1066MHz DDR2 or PC2-8500 and memory timing
is 5-5-5-15 (CAS-TRCD-TRP-TRAS).
This memory is also lead free with EPP.
Now what does
DDR, CAS, tRCD, tRP, tRAS, tCLK, and EPP mean?
DDR:
This stands for Double Date Rate and that means it doubles the bandwidth of the
memory by transferring data twice as fast on both the rising and falling of the
clock cycle.
CAS (tCL):
This stands for Column Address Strobe or Column Address Select and that
essentially means the number of cycles for the memory to get information and
then process that information. Also keep in mind that a lower CAS is much better
than a higher CAS, so try and keep CAS as low as possible when overclocking.
tRCD:
This is the delay from the time a row is activated to when the cell (or column)
is activated via the CAS signal and data can be written to or read from a memory
cell. When memory is accessed sequentially, the row is already active and tRCD
will not have much impact. However, if memory is not accessed in a linear
fashion, the current active row must be deactivated and then a new row
selected/activated. In such an example, low tRCD's can improve performance.
However, like any other memory timing, putting this too low for the module can
cause instability.
tRP:
RAS Precharge; the time required to switch from one row to the next row. For
example: switching internal memory banks.
tRAS:
Memory architecture is like a spreadsheet with row upon row and column upon
column, with each row being one bank. For the CPU to access memory, it first
must determine which row or bank in the memory is to be accessed and then
activate that row with the RAS signal. Once activated, the row can be accessed
over and over, until the data is exhausted. This is why tRAS has little effect
on overall system performance but could impact system stability if set
incorrectly.
tCLK:
This is simply the clock used for the memory. Note that because frequency is
1/t, if memory were running at 100Mhz, the timing of the memory would be
1/100Mhz, or 10nS.
EPP:
This stands for Enhanced Performance Profiles and is a new approach that
simplifies overclocking and ensures memory and platform compatibility. This
technology was defined to utilize the extra space in the EEPROM to store memory
configuration settings that are sufficient to optimize and maximize the
performance of a memory module. It basically auto detects your motherboard's
chipset and sets the memory timing accordingly. While EEP is nice, many
overclockers will be manually adjusting their memory in the motherboard's BIOS.
This memory is also Dual Channel which means better overall memory bandwidth
resulting in superior performance. In order to benefit from this technology you
will need to have a dual channel motherboard. Non-dual channel motherboards do
not have two fully independent 64-bit memory controllers, but dual channel
boards do which means they have a 128-bit memory interface. They can be
installed singly, but obviously performance will be much less at the same MHz.
Please remember that this memory is DDR2 and it does differ from DDR memory in a
number of ways. Please note that DDR2 memory is the new memory standard for
today's motherboards. The following explanation below goes over the general
differences. It does not take into account some of the faster DDR/DDR2
memory on the market, but it is designed to help you distinguish between the
two:
To
begin, the
maximum Data Rate is different (400MHz for DDR vs. 667MHz for DDR2), Bus
Frequency (200MHz vs. 333MHz), DRAM Frequency (200MHz vs. 166MHz), Package Type
(TSOP-II vs. FBGA), Voltage (~2.5 vs. 1.8), Prefetch Size (2 bits vs. 4 bits)
and a CAS Latency (which varies quite a bit but in general 2.5 for DDR vs. 4 for
DDR2 memory). The on-die termination is different as well. To eliminate signal
noise, DDR uses transistors that are on the motherboard whereas for DDR2 it’s on
each memory chip. The Off Chip Driver Calibration on DDR2 memory also increases
signal integrity.
While 240-pin DDR2, 184-pin DDR and the older style 168-pin DIMM memory are all
approximately the same size, the 240-pin DIMMs and 184-pin DIMMs have only one
notch within the row of pins. The notch in a 240-pin DDR2 DIMM is slightly more
toward the center of the module. Please keep in mind that DDR2 memory is not
backward compatible and will only fit motherboards specifically designed for it.
Detailed Specifications:
- Part Number: BL2KIT12864AL1065
- Module Size: 2GB kit (1GBx2)
- Package: Ballistix Tracer 240-pin DIMM (with LEDs)
- Feature: DDR2 PC2-8500
- Configuration: 128Meg x 64
- DIMM Type: UNBUFFERED
- Error Checking: NON-ECC
- Speed: DDR2-1066
- Voltage: 2.2V
- Memory Timings: 5-5-5-15
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