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Review: The world's fastest desktop RAM? Corsair stakes a claim with DOMINATOR GT 2GHz

by Tarinder Sandhu on 16 February 2009, 08:20 4.0

Tags: DOMINATOR DDR3-2,000 CL7 6GB, Intel (NASDAQ:INTC), Corsair

Quick Link: HEXUS.net/qaqzf

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How we test. The usage notes are important!

Specifications

Memory Corsair TR3X6G2000C7GTF Corsair TR3X6G1866C9DF Crucial Ballistix Tracer LED 6GB Crucial CT3KIT12864BA1339 Crucial CT3KIT25664BA1067
Memory capacity 6GB (3x 2GB) 6GB (3x 2GB) 6GB (3x 2GB) 3GB (3x 1GB) 6GB (3x 2GB)
Memory speed and timings 2,000MHz, 7-8-7-20 2T/1T 1,866MHz, 9-9-9-24 2T 1,600MHz, 8-8-8-24 2T 1,33MHz, 9-9-9-24 2T 1,066MHz, 7-7-7-20 1T
Rated voltage 1.65V 1.65V 1.65V 1.5V 1.5V
CPU Intel Core i7 965 EE ES (3.20GHz) 
Core speed 3.289GHz 3.20GHz 3.20GHz and 3.289GHz 3.20GHz 3.20GHz
Uncore speed 4.0GHz 3.73GHz 3.2GHz 2.66GHz 2.66GHz
Motherboard Gigabyte EX58-UD5
BIOS revision F5d (08/02/2009)
Graphics Card Force3D Radeon HD 4870 512MB
Disk drive(s) Samsung Spinpoint F1 1TB
Mainboard software Intel Inf 9.1.01007
Graphics driver Catalyst 9.1
PSU Corsair HX1000W
Operating System Windows Vista Business SP1 64-bit
Approx. price at time of writing £475 (posted to UK) £344.01 £297.84 £85 £145

Tests

2D benchmarks SiSoft Sandra 2009 SP2 (15.72) Win64 memory bandwidth (float)
ScienceMark 2.0 memory latency
HEXUS.PiFast
wPrime (1024M calculation)
DivX 6.8.3 encode of 1.22GB file
Far Cry 2 benchmarking loading time

 

3D Benchmarks Far Cry 2 v1.01, 1,680x1,050 4x AA,  vhq, ranch long demo.
Enemy Territory: Quake Wars, OpenGL, 1,024x768 0xAA, 0xAF low
Enemy Territory: Quake Wars, OpenGL, 1,680x1,050 4xAA, 16xAF vhq

Setup notes - important

We've re-run a bunch of high-quality DDR3 modules with the Gigabyte EX58-UD5 motherboard. Now, the usual apples-to-apples comparison would necessitate an identical core clock-speed but with different memory frequencies that corresponded with the RAM, availed by using the board's memory multipliers. This is how all the modules, bar the 2GHz pack, have been run.

Appreciating that a 2GHz memory speed cannot be obtained by using a BCLK of 133MHz, explained on the previous page, we've attempted to keep the core frequency relatively close to 3.2GHz by dropping the CPU's multiplier to 23x and raising BCLK to 143MHz. This way, using a 14x memory-multiplier, the rated frequency can be achieved. What this means is that the DOMINATOR GT's performance isn't directly comparable against the other modules, so we've re-run the Crucial Ballistix Tracer LED DDR3-1,600 pack at the same CPU BCLK, but with a 10x memory-multiplier, leading to a memory speed of 1,430MHz. What we're looking at is how the memory frequency influences overall performance.

The DOMINATOR GT also ran flawlessly with a 1T command rate, and those numbers have also been added.

The following graphs, therefore, have the Corsair DOMINATOR GT 2GHz (2T/1T) directly compared to the Crucial Ballistix Tracer DDR3-1,600 at 1,430MHz, and then the Ballistix Tracer, at its default 1,600MHz clock, in direct comparison with the DDR3-1,066, DDR3-1,333, and DDR3-1,866 kits. If any of this doesn't make sense hit the right2reply thread.