Teamgroup T-Force Night Hawk RGB DDR4 Memory Review

Memory (DDR4/DDR5) and Storage (SSD/NVMe) 378 Page 7 of 14 Published by

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Memory timings - The 64-bit OS & Your Memory

What Are Memory Timings?

Okay, allow me to explain a little what you will run into with memory timings. First off latency. We used the word numerous times already in this article. Latency is the time between when a request is made and the request is answered. I.E, if you are in a restaurant for a meal, the latency would be the time between when you ordered your meal to the time you received it. The faster your order is served, the better right? Therefore, in memory terms, it is the total time required before data (your meal) can be written to or read from the memory. Latency - lower is better. 
 


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Say we notice on the packaging is this: CL 16-18-18-38 1.35V (2T) for a memory kit. What do the numbers mean? Well this refers to CAS-tRCD-tRP-tRAS CMD (respectively) and these values are measured in clock cycles.

 
CAS Latency

Undoubtedly, one of the most essential timings is that of the CAS Latency and is also the one most people can actually understand. Since data is often accessed sequentially (same row), the CPU only needs to select the next column in the row to get the next piece of data. In other words, CAS Latency is the delay between the CAS signal and the availability of valid data on the data pins (DQ). Therefore, the latency between column accesses (CAS), plays an important role in the performance of the memory. The lower the latency, the better the performance. However, the memory modules must be capable of supporting low latency settings.

tRCD
There is a delay from when a row is activated to when the cell (or column) is activated via the CAS signal and data can be written to or read from a memory cell. This delay is called tRCD. When memory is accessed sequentially, the row is already active and tRCD will not have much impact. However, if memory is not accessed in a linear fashion, the current active row must be deactivated and then a new row selected/activated. It is this example where low tRCD's can improve performance. However, like any other memory timing, putting this too low for the module can result in instability.

tRP
tRP is the time required to terminate one Row access and begin the next row access. Another way to look at this it that tRP is the delay required between deactivating the current row and selecting the next row. Therefore, in conjunction with tRCD, the time required (or clock cycles required) to switch banks (or rows) and select the next cell for either reading, writing or refreshing is a combination of tRP and tRCD.

tRAS
Memory architecture is like a spreadsheet with row upon row and column upon column with each row being 1 bank. In order for the CPU to access memory, it must first determine which Row or Bank in the memory that is to be accessed and activate that row via the RAS signal. Once activated, the row can be accessed over and over until the data is exhausted. This is why tRAS has little effect on overall system performance but could impact system stability if set incorrectly.

Command Rate
The Command Rate is the time needed between the chip select signal and the when commands can be issued to the RAM module IC. Typically, these are either 1 clock or 2. Memory testing is a process of trial and error, find and seek the maximum. This is pretty much a sucker for your free time.

DUDE It's 2017 - Go With A 64-bit Operating System!

Windows 98, who didn't use that OS? What amount of memory did your PC have? Right, likely 128MB. We now test a system that has 64 times that amount of memory. Over the years we progressed and noticed that applications have gotten more and more memory intensive. With Windows XP we moved towards 512MB as standard to prevent the OS from swapping to the HDD, and as explained on the previous page with the latest games we see that the certain games really like 1GB. All this has happened over just a couple of years. When Microsoft launched Windows Vista 1GB was just be bare minimum recommended specification. They actually recommend 2GB with Windows 7 at minimum. And then there's 64-bit platforms supporting more than 4GB memory. Anno 2016 with Windows 10 4GB these days is considered too little, 8GB to 16GB is recommended for a nice gaming PC and 32GB for the professional systems that do content creation. Anyway, let's throw the modules in some tests. There is NO valid reason to opt for a 32-bit operating system anymore.


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