Thursday, 10 September 2009

Benchmark: FSB 1600vs1700 Memory Performance

I am curious how much performance would it bring to memory while increasing FSB speed, so I've increase my cpu bus speed to 425 MHz for 100 MHz Rated FSB increment and remain the core speed margin.
CPU clocks configuration showing on CPU-Z
Everest Benchmark
I've use  Everest for the only benchmark for the comparison to the performance result that previous post did. Basically is tested using exactly same test environment but just the cpu clock configurations are 9.0 x 400 and 8.5 x 425.
 
Memory Read 

Memory Write
 
Memory Copy
 
Memory Latency

Conclusion
The benchmark result indicates memory performance does increase by just increasing FSB frequency for the throughput, the memory read performance increase is very minimal, but memory write does the different.  Lastly, the downside of increasing FSB frequency seems will resulted greater of memory latency, and luckily it is very minimal as well as compare to the gain from memory write.

Thursday, 3 September 2009

Benchmark: 2x2GB vs 4x2GB 1066Mhz DDR2 RAM

My friend and i first thought of increasing of memory capacity might resulted in lower performance, so i decided to do benchmark comparison on old pair against old pair plus my newly bought pair of Kingston HyperX 1066Mhz DDR2 RAM module which means 2x2GB vs 4x2GB configurations. Four of them are exactly same performance, but the new pair just come with extended heatsink. The OS platform using for benchmark is Windows 7 64-bit RC build 7100 and hardware configurations of my system shown in CPU-Z at below:

System configuration showing in CPU-Z.

I have used Everest v4.60 beta and SiSoftware Sandra 2009 SP4 to benchmark and compare the configurations performance differences.

EVEREST Benchmark
The yellow bar is 4x2GB setup and the green bar is 2x2GB setup.

Memory Read Benchmark

Memory Write Benchmark

Memory Copy Benchmark

Memory Latency Benchmark

SiSoftware Sandra Benchmark
The red and orange bars are 4x2GB configuration and the rest 3 are 2x2GB configuration.

Memory Bandwidth Benchmark

Memory Latency - Random Access Benchmark

Memory Latency - Linear Access Benchmark


Cache and Memory Benchmark
Conclusion
Memory Read, Write and Copy having slight bandwidth increase instead of dropping, and the latency is having no different. After all, the memory capacity did not dropping the memory performance as we expected.