Computer Gaming Hardware

Reviews, Ratings, and More ™

So Kingston made a considerably good memory models in over the past few years in making, with the introduction of the DDR memory modules in the start of the century in the early 2000, with some of the features being the great improvement to their production line of high performance memory modules, and with the back of the past improvement and great highs in their market, they can really make their way to the new DDR3 memory with the introduction of the triple channel interface and the support of the new Intel Core 7i.

So we are going to talk about the new high performance DDR3 memory kit form Kingston, we have seen the previous memory module from Kingston, the mainstream performance kits with some moderate use of the heat spreaders, mostly it occupies most of the memory size but never to go as high as it is and pretty reliable and speedy in most day to day applications. But the new, high performance DDR3 memory, running at the higher frequency cycle of about 1800Mhz with the right BIOS settings and also the inclusion of the Intel’s own X series to over clock with brilliant ease when the computer encounters a increase of memory usage like loading games further decreases the timings count in the memory better in-turn improve transferring data. But the Kingston hyper X series is a total 6GB triple chip kit with 2 GB each of the modules able to keep enough space for high demanding apps or windows itself plus, the physically having a high rise heat spreaders that rather than fins but the full metal pointing out and also much taller than the corsair offering in high performance modules. These heat-spreaders look very impressive; however, they may cause some serious difficulties during system assembly.

So Kingston made a good memory module to look at, if it is going to be hard installing it, against the more prominent Corsair series of the dominator series. So we are going to check the performance acquired in the Kingston form their Corsair counterparts, well to be honest we find that a 1600Mhz is the right money to buy most core 7i memory modules, but the x instructions gave it an ability to increase automatically to the 2000MHz mark and the volt are also managed without a problem but stick to the 1600 for those people in between the latency and bandwidth performance, while most modules prefer the more high MHz frequency in their modules which increases the much needed width in the system has to look on the VRAM settings first. But most of the time these high-end memory modules would just take care of themselves with the help of some XMP over-clocking and leaves you with space to game your games with seamless performance over the loading times and so on. Overall the memory looks like a monster of the prize to look at but as with all of the core 7i products you have to pay a little more to be in the big leagues.

Published in: Hardware,RAM memory

Leave a Reply