Geil PC2-4300

Geil has been very active in introducing a full range of Enthusiast memory over the past year. This was even clearer when Kingston and Geil were the first two manufacturers to supply DDR2 memory for testing.



Test DIMMs were a matched pair of single-sided 512MB DDR2 DIMMs with lightweight aluminum heatspreaders. The Geil aluminum heatspreaders appear just as effective as others in this roundup, but they are much lighter than some other solutions. Geil also includes the temperature-sensitive label on the DIMM to report heat-sink temperature. While a good idea, the labels are all but hidden away when memory is mounted and they are, therefore, not very useful for truly monitoring memory temperature. They are nice to look at and talk about, however, and screen-based temperature monitoring will probably make its way to Enthusiast memory, eventually.

We do not know what memory chips are used by Geil in their memory, and the performance in our memory tests was unique compared to other tested memory.

Test Results: Geil PC2-4300

The full suite of benchmark tests were run at all memory speeds. This includes Quake3, Super PI, Sandra 2004 SP2 Memory Tests, Aida 32 Memory Tests, and Return to Castle Wolfenstein-Enemy Territory. We also ran UT2003, Aquamark 3, and Comanche 4 at every memory speed to verify stability of the reported memory timings. All benchmarks and additional tests had to complete without incident for the memory settings to be considered stable.

Geil PC2-4300 (DDR2 533) - 2 x 512Mb Single-Bank
Speed Memory Timings & Voltage Quake3 fps Sandra UNBuffered Sandra Standard Buffered Super PI 2M places
(time in sec)
533DDR
800FSB
4-4-4-10
1.8V
363.4 INT 2756
FLT 2828
INT 4854
FLT 4846
108
667DDR
1000FSB
5-4-5-10
2.0V
449.6 INT 3347
FLT 3422
INT 6016
FLT 6020
87
686DDR
258FSB
5-5-5-10
2.0V
458.0 INT 3280
FLT 3387
INT 6130
FLT 6128
85

Geil PC2-4300 (DDR2 533)
Speed RCW-ET
Radar
Aida 32
Read
Aida 32
Write
Aida 32
Total
533DDR
800FSB
77.5 5226 2059 7731
667DDR
1000FSB
96.6 6466 2303 8769
686DDR
258FSB
98.3 6857 2515 9102

Geil is an early DDR2, so we somewhat forgive the fact that across the board, it required slower timings than other DDR2 in this roundup. The memory bandwidth is also at the bottom of performance in almost every test. This is more likely the result of the early DDR2 chips used by Geil, and we are confident that current production is likely using updated DDR2 chips with better performance.

Despite the fact that this is single-sided memory running older chips at poorer memory timings, the Geil PC2 4300 also ran without incident at DDR2 667 and at the highest speed DDR2 686 that the Abit AA8 could achieve. While the Geil memory did require a bit more voltage to reach 667 and 686, it ran all of our tests without a problem at both 667 and 686. Things are certainly looking good for 667 speed on DDR2.

Crucial PC2-4300U Kingmax DDR2-533
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  • betatest3 - Wednesday, August 18, 2004 - link

    The DDR2 667 memory is allready available and price is around $245 to $270 for 512mb .The only memory I found was made by Crucial and some Generic by doing a search on pricewatch.com site The $245 memory can be seen here -->
    http://www.newegg.com/app/viewproductdesc.asp?DEPA...

    Hmm.. this DDR2 memory was just made for Intel ??? or maybe in newer motherboards can be used with AMD also ? I would not think a newer memory made by many company's would just be designed for intel especially when alot of manufacturers are jumping over to AMD or can AMD use this 667 memory ?
  • jiulemoigt - Monday, July 12, 2004 - link

    A very funny thought aquired to me after reading the older article on AMD's DDR2 stance. If their waiting for DDR2 667 and the memory is ready but quitly being called 533 does that mean AMD may actully be ready to pull a fast on Intel? Considering the way the chip is designed could the memory controller be flashed to update to the memory controller the same way the other frequencies are set? Oh and I would not buy a LGA socket the pin's being spring loaded just looks to be trouble :o cool article
  • Wesley Fink - Friday, July 9, 2004 - link

    FlameDeer -

    Good catch. P. 6 is corrected to 1032FSB.
  • FlameDeer - Friday, July 9, 2004 - link

    Thanks for quick respond at #10, Wesley! :)

    Really appreciate your hours and hours of hard work to publish this very first hand thorough DDR2 roundup! :)

    A quick look again of this good article, I noticed something need to ask. In page 7 till page 14, is that "258FSB" of 686DDR in every table mean 4 x 258 = "1032FSB"? And is this FSB related to page 6 settings no.3 of "1016FSB/DDR2-686"? Just curious, thank you! :)
  • pookie69 - Friday, July 9, 2004 - link

    Cool - i think i understand that now.

    Thanks for replying and explaining. Appreciated :)
  • Wesley Fink - Friday, July 9, 2004 - link

    The ratio is 3:4 looking at base clocks (200 to 266). The bus is then quad-pumped to 800 and memory is DOUBLE Data Rate or 533. I do agree it is a bit confusing since the final 800 ratio is 3:2 of the final DDR2 ratio (533).

    The 975/865 standard was 1:1 since the base clocks are 200, even though the final speeds were 800FSB (quad) and 400 DDR. It was never called 2:1.

  • pookie69 - Friday, July 9, 2004 - link

    Nice article - good job :)

    Only one point; where it reads;

    "This is currently slightly below the memory timing of 250 required to run memory at DDR2 667, at the standard 3:4 Intel memory ratio for DDR2."

    >>> shouldn't that be a 3:2 ratio?

    Or am i confused :S

    Nice article again - keep up the good work Mr. Fink ;)
  • TrogdorJW - Friday, July 9, 2004 - link

    I think a better conclusion might have been: And the winner is... NO ONE! (Or everyone, depending on whether you see the glass as half full or half empty.) While there are definitely measurable differences in performance between the various memories, reality is that only Quake 3 and Enemy Territory are meaningful benchmarks. Seeing that Quake 3 is one of the most bandwidth hungy games of all time, it's rather telling that a 15.4% advantage in Sandra only equates to a 2.7% performance difference in Quake 3 (and even less in W:ET). I'm not criticizing your work, mind you - just pointing out that the best case scenario of Sandra Unbuffered RAM tests are not the way we actually use our systems.

    At some point, it would be nice to see a memory roundup that included all the benchmarks that are used in CPU and graphics comparisons. Obviously, that wouldn't be a prudent use of your time when we're still being limited by the motherboard. However, in another six months, I would like to see a memory comparison put together that broadened the field of view in regards to benchmarks.

    Great article, though. It will certainly be interesting to see how far each memory type can actually overclock when the motherboard is no longer the limiting factor. For the present, though, it looks like we might as well just save our pennies and buy cheaper DDR2 modules. (Not that any of them are actually "cheap"....)
  • Pumpkinierre - Thursday, July 8, 2004 - link

    I suppose with all these new goodies, Wesley, you are going to give up on the excellent straight DDR articles you used to do.

    For the tRAS, the usual formula for DDR is: tRCD+CAS latency + 2 cycles, see:
    http://www.mushkin.com/mushkin/pop-up/latencies.ht...
    So that seems to work for DDR2 at tRAS >10. I dont know why DDR2 still works at tRAS of 4 though. I also dont know why nForce chipsets have their tRAS so high (10-12) on ordinary DDR.

    You've got an engineering sample (multiplier unlocked) Prescott that o'clocks well. So you ought to do some tests at same CPU speed but different FSBs like you have done on the a64s. I know you might think it is stupid given that retail cpus are multiplier locked but some of us want to see whether it is better to put more money in a higher grade cpu or get a cheaper one and o'clock it high using more expensive high speed low latency memory. You had'nt done this with the N'wood/i875 memory tests either, but I cant remember whether you've got a good N'wood engineering sample lying around. Anyway just a suggestion.
  • ariafrost - Thursday, July 8, 2004 - link

    Now if only DDR2 latencies were lower and the pricetag was less than DDR1 :)

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