ASE Labs
Welcome Guest. Please register or log in now. There are 55 people online (0 Friends).
  • Home
  • Articles
  • News
  • Forum
  • Register/Login
You are at ASE Labs » Articles » Previews Index » Corsair XMS2 DHX 4GB PC2-6400

Corsair XMS2 DHX 4GB PC2-6400

Author
Aron Schatz
Posted
March 25, 2008
Views
31167
Corsair XMS2 DHX 4GB PC2-6400
Corsair steps forward with their XMS2 DHX 4GB kit of DDR2. This product combines good performance at a great price.
Tags RAM Corsair DDR2 DHX XMS2

Page 1: Intro, Packaging, Modules

Intro:

It has been almost five years since I reviewed a Corsair product. In that time, ASE Labs and the industry have evolved. Five years ago it was DDR that was the memory of choice and DDR2 wasn't even on enthusiast's tongues. Fast forward to 2008 and we've got DDR3 just coming on the market. DDR2 is still alive and is the king of value right now. Corsair's 4GB XMS2 PC2-6400 kit is the subject for review.

Packaging:

packaging.jpg


You'll notice a price sticker on this package. This is a retail sample that was purchased by the photography editor, Steven Susman. We strive to provide honest reviews to the readers at ASE Labs and will purchase products to accomplish this. The retail packaging was protective enough for this RAM. This package was purchase from Microcenter which is really an incredible store. It's like shopping at an online store in person. There are things there that you never would see at any other retail store. They should open one closer to where I live, though.

Modules:

modules1.jpg


Not all RAM is the same. I think the picture above shows that this kit is severely different than other kits from companies such as Crucial or Kingston. These modules have a specialized heat dissipation feature in the form of a super-sized heatsink. This heatsink is actually a four layered kit and two of the layers are actually bonded with the PCB to cool the board itself as well as the individual modules. This type of cooling system should keep the RAM from heating up much past ambient temperature.

specs.jpg


The module timing and voltage information are clearly labeled on each stick. You can clearly see that these modules are rated for use at 1.8V running at 800MHz (PC2-6400) with timings of 5-5-5-18. All manufactures should put this important information on the stick itself especially if it is performance RAM. Since the specification of the RAM uses 1.8V (which is the proper JEDEC voltage) the SPD contains the proper speed and timings so there is no need for adjustment past installation to get the rated specs. RAM that uses higher voltage than default should always default to relax settings for SPD values. Corsair doesn't suffer from this problem and can offer the rated values.

modules2.jpg


These modules are huge. The metal heatspreaders do not add considerable weight to the package as a whole, so there is no worry of the sticks falling out of the socket in use. Corsair uses a standard brushed metallic look for the XMS2 DHX with a orange and black label for extra accents. The PCB is black for the extra accent.

modules3.jpg


The cooling system is nicely bonded to the modules themselves and if you purchase this RAM, you are buying the cooling system. There is no need to bother trying to rip it off. Don't ruin good modules by doing drastic things.

modulesx.jpg


Did I mention that these modules are huge with that heatsink attached? They really are big. There is an extra add-on that can be purchased to give the modules their own fans. I think that is a useless option considering that most cases have fans that do a fine enough job as it is. Perhaps people that water cool their computer would find this interesting.
  Next Page »
Page 1
Page 2
View As Single Page Print This Page Print Entire Article
Related Articles
  • Crucial Tracer Red 6GB Triple PC3-12800 BL3KIT25664TR1608
  • Kingston HyperX PC2-8500 4GB KHX8500D2T1K2/4G
  • Core i7: Memory Speed
  • Kingston HyperX 2GB PC3-14400 KHX14400D3K2 XMP
  • Kingston HyperX 2GB PC3-12800 KHX12800D2K2
members/attachments/upload/2008/03/25/2473m.jpg packaging.jpg members/attachments/upload/2008/03/25/2474m.jpg modules1.jpg members/attachments/upload/2008/03/25/2475m.jpg modules2.jpg members/attachments/upload/2008/03/25/2476m.jpg modules3.jpg members/attachments/upload/2008/03/25/2477m.jpg modulesx.jpg members/attachments/upload/2008/03/25/2478m.jpg specs.jpg

Title

Medium Image View Large
Login
Welcome Guest. Please register or log in now.
Forgot your password?
Navigation
  • Home
  • Articles
  • News
  • Register/Login
  • Shopping
  • ASE Forums
  • Anime Threads
  • HardwareLogic
  • ASE Adnet
Latest News
  • Welcome to the new server
  • Gmail Gets Optional Preview Pane
  • HBO Go on Consoles
  • HP Touchpad Update
  • Happy System Administrator Day!
  • Apple Releases OS X 10.7 Lion
  • More Android Apps Found to be Malware
  • This Weeks News
  • Happy Birthday USA!
  • Windows Phone Gets Angry Birds, Custom Rings Coming To Mango
Latest Articles
  • Sapphire Edge HD4 Mini PC
  • Logitech G710+ Mechanical Gaming Keyboard
  • EnerPlex Kickr IV And Jumpr Solar Power Pack
  • Kingston Wi-Drive
  • Kingston SDX10V/128GB SDXC Memory
  • In-Win K1 All In One Convertible Case
  • Kingston MobileLite G3 USB3 SDXC Card Reader
  • Synology DS712+ Network Application Server
  • Rapoo Wireless Touchpad Keyboard E9080
  • Netgear NeoTV NTV200 Streaming Player
Latest Topics
  • Pokemon: The Ongaku Region
  • Random Fact of the Day
  • What are you listening to now?
  • P A R A S Y T E [A Samurai's Story]
  • We Are C A R E E R S [64th Hunger Games!]
  • Lets talk
  • Review Nokia Lumia 800 V.S. iPhone 4S: Convert DVD/Video to mobile phone devices.
  • You're a Fanfiction?!
  • hello every one
  • Hp Z1 Workstation Benchmarks
  • Sapphire Edge HD4 Mini PC at ASE Labs
  • HTC 8X
  • Dragon's Dogma
Advertisement
Advertisement
Affiliate Reviews
  • Raspberry Pi Gets New Wayland Weston Renderer at Phoronix
  • Chrome 27 Loads Web Pages Faster at Phoronix
  • G.SKILL Hosts Official OC World Record Stage at Computex 2013 at Hardware Secrets
  • NVIDIA Announces PhysX Support for Microsoft Xbox One Game Console at Hardware Secrets
  • Sony Mobile's Xperia Tablet Z Now Available Worldwide at Hardware Secrets
  • Microsoft Unveils Xbox One at Hardware Secrets
  • Shuttle OMNINAS KD20 Review at techPowerUp!
  • Debian GNU/Hurd 2013 Release Brings New Packages at Phoronix
  • Intel Ultrabook Performance Is Faster With Mesa 9.2 at Phoronix
  • Hot Relocation HDD To SSD Support For Btrfs at Phoronix
  • Phoronix Test Suite 4.6.0 "Utsira" Released at Phoronix
  • New Intel X.Org Driver Supports All Of Haswell at Phoronix
  • Mesa 9.1.3 Release Corrects Some Bugs at Phoronix
  • SQLite Now Faster With Memory Mapped I/O at Phoronix
Press Release
  • Epiq Solutions Announces the Matchstiq(TM) Z1 Handheld Software Defined Radio
  • Writers' Group Film Corp. Unveils New Strategic Initiatives Aimed at Revenue Growth and Leveraging Distribution Platforms
  • Promoting the Myth of the "Always Connected" Device
  • BillFloat's SmartPay Expands Pilot Program to RadioShack
  • =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Cricket_Announces_Launch_of_the_4G_Samsung_Galaxy_S=AE4?=
  • Merchants can win $10,000 cash plus a touch-screen POS System in Harbortouch's Business Upgrade Contest
  • Life Wireless offers cellphone service in Nevada and Ohio
  • RadioShack Begins Collecting Customer Donations To Benefit Texas and Oklahoma Tornado Victims
  • GainSpan's Application Development Kit Jump-Starts Innovation for Wireless Video Applications
  • D&H Distributing's "Get Authorized" Program Makes Pricing Compliance More Convenient
Home - ASE Publishing - About Us
© 2010 Aron Schatz (ASE Publishing) [Queries: 18 (8 Cached)] [Rows: 303 Fetched: 46] [Page Generation time: 0.34914779663086]