“A few months ago, we tested Kingston’s infamous HyperX 2133 CL8. This was the best and most expensive memory money could buy at the moment. Since competition hardly rested on their laurels, it was expected for more manufacturers to appear on the market with 2133 MHz models. The reputed manufacturer such as Kingston wouldn’t be as reputed if they hadn’t had the custom of surprising us just when we thought that a certain memory technology has hit its peak, in this case, DDR3. The competition was going around 2200 MHz, when Kingston decided to send us two kits of its newest memory, declared to 2333 and 2400 MHz, respectively…”Here are some more Memory articles from around the web:
- Crucial Ballistix BL2KIT25664FN1608 Memory Review @ OCC
- Crucial Ballistix Tracer 4GB DDR3 1333MHz Memory Unboxing Video @ eTeknix
- G.SKILL 2133MHz DDR3 Pi-Series Memory Kit @ Benchmark Reviews
- MX-Tech Black Diamond DDR3-1600 4Gb Kit @ Funky Kit
- rucial Ballistix Tracer DDR3 1333MHz Memory Giveaway @ eTeknix
Pushing the DDR3 spec
DDR3 is not really that old but has finally overtaken DDR2 for the first choice in memory for new systems. Just like its predecessors, as the DDR3 standard matures manufacturers can get higher frequencies out of their DIMMs and of course charge a premium for those high speed kits. Kingston has been rather forceful in pushing DDR3 to its current limitations and they have just released two new kits. The highest end kit hit 2.5GHz @ 9-11-9-27 during the quick overclocking experiment InsideHW performed.