Introduction
Kingston01
In the last three months the price of DDR3 memory has taken a beating.
Back in November 2008 a 6GB tri-channel DDR3-1,333 kit would have cost
you around £165, with many costing significantly more. Take a
look at the same modules today and they're
available
for around £85. Still not as cheap as DDR2, granted,
but the largest impediment to a transition to Intel's Core i7 or AMD's
AM3 is no longer the memory, really.
Scale the frequency ladder and the crème de la
crème is typified by Core i7-oriented modules running at
2GHz. Corsair has a couple of
DOMINATOR GT packs, OCZ lists the Blade
Series, and G.Skill has announced the
Perfect Storm series, all CL7
kits based on, it seems, Elpida ICs.
Another entrant has been making noise about its Core i7 2GHz memory,
and it's none other than Kingston - the runaway (third-party) leader in
global DRAM sales.
To see what all the fuss is about, we take an in-depth look at some imaginatively-titled HyperX
KHX16000D3ULT1K3/6GX modules, to see if they can upset the apple-cart in
the ultra-high-end space.