Friday, September 17, 2010

What is the differance between giant density bump an low density strike?

is one better than the other or is it of late user preferance?

What is the differance between giant density bump an low density strike?

Here's a bit of information that I found comparing High Density RAM to Low Density RAM.



It costs memory manufacturers almost alike to produce Low Density modules which have 100% compatibility next to all systems on the flea market, comparing to producing high density modules. So why would manufacturer be so foolish to produce high density modules which one and only have 10% compatibility next to systems on the market? The rationale is simple, because high density modules are chiefly manufacturing process rejects/seconds that cannot be made as a low density modules. It is unbelievably much like Intel CPU, those CPU that cannot be made as Pentium 4 CPU become a slower bus Celeron CPU instead, by a down-binning process.



In short:-

LOW DENSITY modules own 100% compatibility with ALL systems and ALL chipsets.

HIGH DENSITY modules merely have 10% compatibility.



The knit for this is given below.
Eh... the density? I guess...
Not sure about density?? But RAM rise and fall in type DDR1, DDR2,DDR3 and some ripened SDR's etc. These different types will only wok on the motherboard they are designed for. Check your RAM type, most adjectives is DDR1, you may just see it as DDR RAM, find your FSB speed and contest the RAM specs to this.

Eamonn.
High density is better than low density low density can be 100mhz high density can mingy 400mhz.


No comments:

Post a Comment