F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop The laptop cooling pad attached to your RAM?

The laptop cooling pad attached to your RAM?

The laptop cooling pad attached to your RAM?

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iDeadlyRekt
Member
183
09-24-2016, 07:08 AM
#1
I noticed something unusual while examining the K5-pro thermal paste. It really stood out to me.
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iDeadlyRekt
09-24-2016, 07:08 AM #1

I noticed something unusual while examining the K5-pro thermal paste. It really stood out to me.

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alleop
Junior Member
21
09-25-2016, 04:25 AM
#2
Heh, OCZ Reaper DDR2-1066 is a top-tier option from back then. You can definitely work with it, though regular RAM doesn’t require it. (The max speed was 800MHz, and these 1066 models likely needed that heat pipe.)
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alleop
09-25-2016, 04:25 AM #2

Heh, OCZ Reaper DDR2-1066 is a top-tier option from back then. You can definitely work with it, though regular RAM doesn’t require it. (The max speed was 800MHz, and these 1066 models likely needed that heat pipe.)

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Hyper_B0Y
Member
215
09-25-2016, 09:42 AM
#3
The exciting days with DDR2 memory. I owned the same OCZ RAM for my setup.
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Hyper_B0Y
09-25-2016, 09:42 AM #3

The exciting days with DDR2 memory. I owned the same OCZ RAM for my setup.

D
DMDan
Junior Member
22
09-28-2016, 05:48 PM
#4
I'm using four Reaper sticks but my system lacks boards that handle above 800MHZ. The next best option is to fill all four slots with OCZ Gold. It's a solid memory setup. I missed when the designs were truly creative, even if they seemed silly. As noted, ECC memory tends to be quite hot. My workstation has three fans just to keep the RAM cool.
D
DMDan
09-28-2016, 05:48 PM #4

I'm using four Reaper sticks but my system lacks boards that handle above 800MHZ. The next best option is to fill all four slots with OCZ Gold. It's a solid memory setup. I missed when the designs were truly creative, even if they seemed silly. As noted, ECC memory tends to be quite hot. My workstation has three fans just to keep the RAM cool.

S
SemCool139
Junior Member
11
09-30-2016, 03:49 PM
#5
GA-EP45-UD3P should function properly. My RAM was set to 938Mhz and paired with a 469 FSB.
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SemCool139
09-30-2016, 03:49 PM #5

GA-EP45-UD3P should function properly. My RAM was set to 938Mhz and paired with a 469 FSB.

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EdenMarie
Member
190
10-01-2016, 03:20 AM
#6
That's quite impressive—faster than DDR3 in my setup! A 775 is solid, but I'm pretty sure the chipset won't handle it. It seems like a midrange Asus board, though I think it might be stuck with Core 2 Quad and only support Pentium 4. The RAM limit to 666 MHz with poor timing is tough. And that early AM2 board from Gigabyte without AM2+ support? Sounds risky, especially with the IMC on my Athlon 64 not being capable of such speeds.
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EdenMarie
10-01-2016, 03:20 AM #6

That's quite impressive—faster than DDR3 in my setup! A 775 is solid, but I'm pretty sure the chipset won't handle it. It seems like a midrange Asus board, though I think it might be stuck with Core 2 Quad and only support Pentium 4. The RAM limit to 666 MHz with poor timing is tough. And that early AM2 board from Gigabyte without AM2+ support? Sounds risky, especially with the IMC on my Athlon 64 not being capable of such speeds.

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Malthe581
Member
140
10-01-2016, 04:39 AM
#7
Ram didn't achieve 1366. The calculation shows 469 times 2 equals 938. I've experienced RAMs up to 1000 before, though they were unreliable. The GA-EP45-UD3P is quite famous for its FSB overclocking potential.
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Malthe581
10-01-2016, 04:39 AM #7

Ram didn't achieve 1366. The calculation shows 469 times 2 equals 938. I've experienced RAMs up to 1000 before, though they were unreliable. The GA-EP45-UD3P is quite famous for its FSB overclocking potential.

C
CrazyFrazy
Junior Member
43
10-03-2016, 05:51 PM
#8
It looks like the item is compatible with dual channel DDR2 1366+* support.
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CrazyFrazy
10-03-2016, 05:51 PM #8

It looks like the item is compatible with dual channel DDR2 1366+* support.