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With a street price of $130 CDN ($70 US) for 256MB, it's about $60 CDN cheaper then Corsair's XMS3200 CAS 2. It's even $40 less expensive then bargain barrel OCZ PC3200 DDR memory.
65% Rating:
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Home >
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Memory >
Kingmax PC3200 DDR |
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Benchmarks: Sandra 2002, PCMark2002
Sisoft Sandra 2002 Pro |
Source: Sandra |
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Sandra is designed to
test the theoretical power of a complete system and individual components. The
numbers taken though are again, purely theoretical and may not represent real
world performance. Higher numbers represent better performance.
SiSoft Sandra 2002 Benchmark Results |
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Memory Benchmark (FSB/Memory) |
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ALU |
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1. |
Integer ALU - 256MB Crucial PC2700 (133/333 MHz) |
2057 MB/s |
2. |
Integer ALU - 256MB KingMAX PC3200 (133/333 MHz) |
2055 MB/s |
3. |
Integer ALU - 256MB KingMAX PC3200 (180/360 MHz) |
2754 MB/s |
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FPU |
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1. |
Float FPU - 256MB Crucial PC2700 (133/333 MHz) |
1999 MB/s |
2. |
Float FPU - 256MB KingMAX PC3200 (133/333 MHz) |
2012 MB/s |
3. |
Float FPU - 256MB KingMAX PC3200 (180/360 MHz) |
2601 MB/s |
At stock speeds it's no surprise that the KingMAX
memory performs on par with the Crucial PC2700 memory. Overclocked to 180 MHz
FSB and the bandwidth jumps quite a bit!
PCMark is a new benchmark from our pals at MadOnion
which a whole system benchmark. It can be used on desktop PC's, Laptops and even
Workstations and tests everyday computing from home to office usage. PCMark
specifically stresses the CPU, memory subsystem, graphics subsystem, hard
drives, WindowsXP GUI (if WinXP is used), video performance and even laptop
batteries. This benchmark was released March 12, 2002 and can be downloaded from
Madonion if you would like to give it a test run on your computer for
comparisons sake...
PCMark2002
Benchmark Results |
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Memory
(FSB/Memory) |
Score |
Ranking |
1 |
256MB Crucial PC2700
(133/333 MHz) |
3410 |
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2. |
256MB KingMAX PC3200 (133/333 MHz) |
3407 |
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3. |
256MB KingMAX PC3200 (180/360 MHz) |
3929 |
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Again at
stock speeds, PCMark can't tell the difference between the Crucial and KingMAX
memory. Overclocking gets us about 500 more PCMark points.
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