OCZ 3700 Gold

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A few weeks ago, when we first starting talking about a review of high-speed memory, OCZ 3700 Gold was the only memory that we had tested to reach DDR500 performance levels. Within those few short weeks, we find five manufacturers who have produced memory that reaches the DDR500 performance level and beyond. As we reported earlier, OCZ 3700 Gold uses Samsung TCB3 chips, which are lasered to improve heat dissipation/performance, and are labeled with a new OCZ ID and speed rating.

While OCZ 3700 GOLD is now out-performed at the top end by several of the tested DDR500 brands, it competes very well against DDR500 memory. It also uses faster timings than any of the PC4000 modules, which makes it the fastest memory in our DDR400 and DDR500 memory tests. If you have a higher speed Pentium 4 800FSB CPU, like the 2.8C, 3.0C, or 3.2C, then memory with faster memory timings, like 3700 Gold, will likely give you the best performance.


OCZ 3700 Gold — 2 x 256 MB Double-Bank
Speed Memory Timings & Voltage Quake3
fps
Sandra UNBuffered Sandra Standard Buffered Super PI 2M places (time in sec)
400DDR
800FSB
2-2-3-6
2.55V
328.07 INT 2840
FLT 2852
INT 4821
FLT 4789
130
500DDR
1000FSB
2.5-3-3-7
2.75V
406.27 INT 3396
FLT 3369
INT 5891
FLT 5943
105
528DDR
1056FSB
2.5-3-4-7
2.85V
420.4 INT 3467
FLT 3518
INT 6297
FLT 6317
100

OCZ 4000 Copper Performance Tests
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  • dshodson - Friday, September 5, 2003 - link

    So what is the best memory to put in my new dell server coming in a week which has the 875 chip. I heard u cant really overclock this system although i havent received mine yet.
  • Anonymous User - Tuesday, September 2, 2003 - link

    Sorry about the typos ( its 11:36 PM here )

    Thanks
    OCZGUY
  • Anonymous User - Tuesday, September 2, 2003 - link

    Uberclocker ,

    If your having a problem with a OCZ part , email me directly , Most problems are related it simple setup issues , and your problem is verry likely fixed in a few simple steps , or with a bios update

    My email is oczguy@ocztechnology.com
    I will not like answer your email until tomorow ( tuesday ) as today is a holiday and I am not in the office today

    Thanks
    OCZGUY
  • Anonymous User - Monday, September 1, 2003 - link

    Hello, I have followd your recommendation and bought an OCZ 4000 in Germany, this weekend. Unfortunately it has not performed to its specification. Can you tell me if there is a special part number I should look for to get their special 'reviewers golden sample' ?

    UberClocker
  • Anonymous User - Saturday, August 30, 2003 - link

    I think if you have a cpu that will do 250 FSB and you purchase memory based on this article and you get within 98% of the results posted in this article, you owe Wesley $10.00. If 20% of the people with favorable results donated, there would be no more need to advertise. Now for the people who did not purchase ram based on this article and are bitching about it being bias, what are you bitching for?. This article has not cost you a cent.

    Thanks Wesley, you saved me a $100 on ram. I almost got caught up in all the hype about 4000 and 4200.

    Fossil
  • Anonymous User - Saturday, August 30, 2003 - link

    This article goes part way to answering the question of what memory configuration is fastest but I was disappointed that there was no variation in ratio.

    I would like to see a review that tests agressive timings against high frequency to see what produces the best results.

    Also a test of all P4C chips running @ 3.6Ghz to see whether there's any benefit in buying the fastest chip.

    With most motherboards easily hitting 1Ghz are we likely to be seeing a P4D which supports a 1066Mhz FSB?
  • Anonymous User - Friday, August 29, 2003 - link

    I think the way to do these reviews is to tell the manufacturer you'd like to include them in a review, purchase the memory from a store you trust, and then get re-imbursed by the manufacturer. That way, there'd be no selected modules and you would know what you were going to put into the review (4 ss vs 2 ds).

    So, when do we get that part 2 of the 865/875 mobo roundup ?
  • retrospooty - Friday, August 29, 2003 - link

    Wesley,

    I have run these tests myself on an IC7G at 200 , 230 250 and 280 FSB and found that 5:4 2-2-2 always beats 1:1 at 2.5-4-4, even 2.5 4-3 ... However SOME motherboards arent as efficient at 5:4 with some types of ram as others... If you try the same test on several different mobo's I think you will find that 5:4 2-2-2 is quite a bit faster in non-synthetic mem test benchmarks.

    Oldfart # 64, you are right about the reviewers and using the synthetic tests to boost sales. good point.
  • Anonymous User - Friday, August 29, 2003 - link

    If your not going to overclock, get low latency pc 3200 or 3500, the PC4000 wont help you at all

    even IF you ARE going to overclock, the PC4000 will not likely get you better performance.
  • Anonymous User - Friday, August 29, 2003 - link

    #67 I'm not an expert by any means but here is how I understand this discussion:
    If you are planning to use one of the faster processors such as the 3.0C you won't be able to achieve a big overclock because the multiplier for that processor is 15. If you want to use a higher speed processor such as the 2.8C or the 3.0c, you really dont need to spend the money on faster memory such as the PC4000 because you probably won't be able to overclock to a point that you will be able to reach a front side bus speed of 250mhz which is the lowest rated speed (x2=ddr500) of the memory module. So as the article has explained,you would be better off with
    slower ram that has faster timings. However, if you have a slower processor such as the 2.4C or the 2.6C, you should be able to achieve a higher overclock because these processors have lower multipliers. In this case you would need faster ram such as the PC4000, because with these processors many have been able to set their front side bus up to and beyond 250mhz. In most scenarios with fast processors/slower ram vs slower processors/faster ram, IMHO, the performance difference may be fairly equal. What is really happening is a cost/benefit consideration. As always be careful!!! Overclocking can damage your system...you do it at your own risk!

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