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The basic configuration is a 667MHz FSB and 533MHz RAM. Is it worth upgrading the memory to 667MHz to match the FSB?

2007-02-05 01:08:32 · 5 answers · asked by arthurh 1 in Computers & Internet Hardware Other - Hardware

5 answers

It probably is not worth it unless yoiur current ram is way slower, like about 1/2 the speed. Even then you may never notice the difference.

2007-02-05 01:16:48 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Nah, don't waste the money, the speed difference won't be very significant except you are into heavy graphic processing (the U should invest in MACINTOSH) or 3D Rendering (you should do a network rendering instead) or playing 3D intensive games (Doom3, Quake 4, FarCry, etc) where you should probably invest in Graphic Card such as Nvidia 8800 Chipset or ATI X900 / 9000 series. Most of the time memory speed is a marketing gimmick, anyway different memory brand has different speed (which is has little significance)

2007-02-05 01:20:18 · answer #2 · answered by BigOne 2 · 0 0

front area Bus serves as a automobile for information conveyance. FSB of a CPU is regularly a million/4th of what it says on the label. For ex. a FSB800 CPU's uncooked bus velocity is 800/4=2 hundred MHz. Or in different words, CPU FSBs are intrinsically quad pumped (regularly) to offer the powerful bus velocity. continually play via the uncooked velocity of FSB (2 hundred to that end). FSB of RAM is a million/2 the label velocity. For ex. a DDR2800 (PC26400) has a uncooked inner velocity of four hundred MHz. yet each and each clock cycle consists of double the advice (for this reason DDR-double information cost) to offer us the powerful velocity of 800. Being twin or quad middle isn't mandatory to FSB. yet regularly quad-cores have swifter FSBs. the better you bypass on the echelon, the swifter their FSBs get. FSB1600s are straightforward with quad-cores. swifter FSBs propose speedy overall performance, albeit RAM could cooperate to realize optimal overall performance. FSB:DRAM ratio could be near to a million:a million for optimization, meaning neither could watch for the different for information. yet a million:2, 3:5 are straightforward too.

2016-10-01 11:10:56 · answer #3 · answered by ? 3 · 0 0

The other posters are probably right. Unless you are alreadcy planning on incrreasing your memory, then stick with the 533mhz sticks.

However, if you are going to increase anyway, then it will be worth it to get matching 667mhz sticks.

2007-02-05 01:29:44 · answer #4 · answered by wyntre_2000 5 · 1 0

Most likely not worth it, unless you have a very compelling reason that you need a faster FSB. You probably wont even notice the speed increase.

2007-02-05 01:25:14 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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