With the maturity of a market space, comes the increasing desire
to push the envelope. This is true no matter what sector of technology
you focus on. Apparently, DDR2 (or PC2) memory has reached a maturity
level that is allowing memory manufacturers to tweak more performance
out of them.
Case
in point, I am going to be putting some OCZ
Platinum Edition DDR2 modules through several tests; the
big deal you ask? Well these aren't your normal fare DDR2 modules,
so let's look over the specifications to see where they
are pushing it.
Specifications
•
PC2-5400
• CL 4-2-2-8 timings
• 2.1V
• EB Platinum Mirrored Copper Heat spreader
• OCZ Lifetime PowerSwap
• EBT (Enhanced Bandwidth Technology)
• EVP to 2.2V

In
the PC2 arena, these are some of the tightest timings I have seen
to date. OCZ has predominantly been known for performance, add
to that their Lifetime warranty and Extended Voltage Protection,
you have a set of overclockers dream sticks.
Well,
now that we got that out of the way, let's look at the modules
that OCZ has sent over for testing. The modules come in the Platinum
mirrored Heat Spreaders, and as is typical of OCZ modules these
are substantial as far as weight is concerned. DDR-II memory is
identified using PC2 instead of just PC in its speed rating. The
EB Platinum Edition modules I am testing today are PC2-5400, you
can take this as being equal to 675MHz, which is comparative to
a quad pumped PC-168 SDR module (remember PC-150 is where SDR
officially stopped).
Overclocking
Unfortunately,
I am yet unable to clock beyond 255FSB with the ASUS P5GDC motherboard.
The OCZ EB Platinum, just as its HyperX counterpart, OC'd to 250FSB
without even a twitch. Of course at 1:1 timings, I am actually
running the memory slower at 250FSB then stock. I selected 666MHz
within the BIOS (giving me a 3:4 which is the same ratio as stock)
and pushed on. The memory performed flawlessly once again. Just
a note, I am still only pushing PC2-5300 speeds, plenty of headroom
available. I was able to tighten the timings on the OCZ modules
to 3-2-2-4 when running stock PC-4200 rate as well as overclocked
1:1 or 500MHz, an impressive CL rating to say the least.
Test
Setup
ASUS
P5GDC Deluxe, HIS Radeon X850XT IceQ II Turbo, WD 80GB 7200RPM
SATA, Intel 520 (P4 2.8E LGA775), OCZ PowerStream 420 PSU
Memory
OCZ
EB Platinum Edition (2.1V) (4-2-2-8)
Kingston HyperX PC2-5400 (1.85V) (4-4-4-10)
When
you set them next to each other (the CL values) you can see several
advantages going to OCZ, we will see if this plays out through
the testing phase of the review.
Testing
software will consist of the following:
SiSoft
Sandra 2005 Memory - Our standard synthetic test to establish
a baseline.
PiFast
- A good indicator of CPU/Motherboard performance is PiFast version
4.3, by Xavier Gourdon. We used a computation of 10000000 digits
of Pi, Chudnovsky method, 1024 K FFT, and no disk memory. Note
that lower scores are better, and times are in seconds.
TMPGEnc
Plus 2.5 - Video encoding is a taxing chore, both on
the Memory and the Processor. We will be encoding a 150mb AVI
file to MPEG2 on our test system. For the AVI to MPEG2 I used
a bit rate of 5000k/Sec, as this is the midrange for a DVD, which
is typically between 1000k/Sec to 10,000k/Sec. I used a frame
size of 720x480 (DVD Std) and 16:9 NTSC. Note that lower scores
are better.
Quake
3 - While it's old and moldy, it still has some value as
a system level benchmark.
SiSoft
Sandra 2005
Although
a synthetic benchmark, it's a popular one, freely available if
you wish to make comparison benchmarks. We will be testing the
memory speeds at stock 2.8GHz speeds as well as 3.5GHz OC'd

The
EB Platinum Edition holds a distinct advantage here and outperforms
the HyperX, by a fair margin. Once overclocked, the HyperX modules
appear to take a little more advantage of the increased FSB, however,
the EB Platinum Edition modules still win outright.
PiFast
A
good indicator of CPU/Motherboard performance is PiFast version
4.3, by Xavier Gourdon. We used a computation of 10000000 digits
of Pi, Chudnovsky method, 1024 K FFT, and no disk memory. Note
that lower scores are better, and times are in seconds.

Time
in Seconds, lower is better
The
OCZ EB Platinum Edition once again outperforms the HyperX modules.
This really shouldn't be a surprise, the CL timings on the OCZ
memory is tighter than that of the HyperX, and probably the difference
in this scenario. Once again, when overclocked, the HyperX gains
some ground, but not enough to overtake.
TMPGEnc
MPEG Encoding
Video
encoding is a taxing chore, both on the Memory and the Processor.
We will be encoding a 150mb AVI file to MPEG2. For the AVI to
MPEG2 I used a bit rate of 5000k/Sec, as this is the midrange
for a DVD, which is typically between 1000k/Sec to 10,000k/Sec.
I used a frame size of 720x480 (DVD Std) and 16:9 NTSC. Note that
lower scores are better.

Time
in Minutes:Seconds, lower is better
In
this test scenario the two pair of sticks are matched, 3 runs
and every time but one (one second difference going to the EB
Platinum Edition), they matched. Overclocking changed very little,
except to give the HyperX modules their first all out win.
Quake
III
Quake
3 is a great game to test memory with, if you drop the resolution
down to 640x480 and min detail, you are forcing the CPU / memory
to handle the lions share, especially when matched to an X850XT
graphics card.

Frames
per second, higher is better
The
OCZ memory once again outperformed the Kingston at stock speeds,
barely. Overclocking did little to change this, as the Kingston
modules gained, but minimally.
Final
Words
It
appears as though DDR2 memory is becoming more and more mainstream.
It also appears OCZ,
with its EB Platinum Edition, is serious about staking the claim
of performance in this arena. With CL timings that you would be
hard pressed to match, especially at PC2-5400 speeds, looks like
the stake is driven deep.

Pros:
667MHz memory for plenty of headroom, 2.1V DDR2 with EVP warranted
to 2.2V, Life Time warranty, Good Looking Heat Spreaders (watch
out for fingerprints on them)
Cons:
Have not been able to hit the top end of this memory yet (is that
a con?), Cost (not extreme in the market place, but above middle
of the road)
Bottom
Line : Performance and OCZ
are becoming synonymous, the OCZ
EB Platinum Edition does not disappoint. Good looks and head room
you can't even touch yet. Whether at stock or overclocked, the
EB Platinum
Edition Modules will not disappoint you.
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