Bashful 0 Posted January 11, 2002 Hi Group, As I'm about to upgrade my hardware with a completely new motherboard, CPU and RAM, the different prices of RAM has made me wonder weather there's a difference between the producers of RAM. Kingston has for me allways seemed like a quality-brand, but is it?? And how about Apacer?? How's theirs DDR-modules?? And what about Samsung?? Is that a producer of RAM that should stick to making TV's!!! Looking forward in some constructive and usefull replies... Best regards Kasper. Copenhagen, Denmark. Share this post Link to post
BladeRunner 0 Posted January 11, 2002 For SDRAM I will only buy Crucial. For RDRAM I will only buy Samsung. The above manufacturers have proved themselves to me as making very reliable memory modules (0% fail rate on those two). They have also shown that their memory is very over-clockable if that's your thing. Share this post Link to post
Bashful 0 Posted January 11, 2002 Hi Bladerunner, Thanks for your reply. But how's Samsung and Crucial when it comes to DDR-modules?? When I look at the prices here in DK, they are as follows for one 256 MB DDR-module: Apacer : $96 Corsair : $132 Crucial : $135 Hyundai : $99 Kingston : $98 Samsung : $84 PQI, Veritech, Simple Technology were also among, but I thought these 6 were enough... ;o) But as you see the Crucial and Corsair is more than 50% more expensive than Samsung - does that indicate a overprice for Crucial and Corsair, or does that indicates that Samsung is crap... no effence... ;o) Best regards Kasper Copenhagen, Denmark Share this post Link to post
Palos 0 Posted January 11, 2002 I have 2 DDR modules from Samsung, CAS 2.5 PC2100 at 256 MB each. No problems yet. Share this post Link to post
BladeRunner 0 Posted January 12, 2002 Well, when it comes to DDR-RAM I've only actually built one PC based around it. As I'd had so much luck with both Samsung & Crucial for the other types I decided on one of those for DDR, picked Crucial because I could order directly from with free delivery. To be honest, no memory is 'crap' but some seems to be better than others. The majority of non-branded memory out there is still 'Major on third' (Major manufacturer chips on third party pcb's). Kingston is always a name I too associate with good quality, however the Kingston RIMM's I purchased couldn't be over-clocked at all. The Samsung ones are running in my system on a 110mhz FSB rock-solid. As a rule you get what you pay for. With memory you tend to find a manufacturer you like and then stick with them. Share this post Link to post
smokinkane 0 Posted January 24, 2002 As far as DDR goes, I have used two different brands than anybody has talked about. Kingmax PC2100 256mg 2 sticks each OCZ PC2700 256mg 2 sticks each The Kingmax DDR was very stable, I just wanted to upgrade to PC2700 OCZ for further overclockability with my P4 setup. My only gripe about the OCZ ram is the fact that in my BIOS I had to set all my ram timings to "by spd" which didn't affect performance becuase it choose the best settings anyway. Share this post Link to post
RoninCS 0 Posted February 3, 2002 Mushkin in all my systems, and not a bad chip in the bunch. They have also proven fairly stable in FSB OC situations, which is what I spend my time doing, as I test multiple platforms with multiple CPUs/RAM configurations. Share this post Link to post