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It is hard to believe that DDR2 has been out for
over four years now, and with the introduction of DDR3 within the
last six months, it would seem that DDR2 is starting to become
passé. However, with the high cost of DDR3 and the lack of
available DDR3 platforms for AMD, DDR2 still has plenty of life
left.
OCZ aims to show us what capabilities DDR2 can
still present to us with their new Titanium sticks, the CL3 edition.
So what makes this set of DDR2-800 special? How does CAS 3
sound? We will see just how these new low latency sticks
perform in today's ClubOC review.

Specifications:
Features:
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Titanium XTC
(Xtreme Thermal
Convection) heatspreaders optimize the thermal management of
memory modules by promoting greater airflow by means of
micro-convection throughout what is usually the dead air space
inside conventional heatspreader designs. In this manner,
build-up of heat is avoided and thermal dissipation of the
memory components is offloaded more efficiently through the
honeycomb design. At the same time, mechanical stability is
maintained.
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2.4V EVP
(Extended Voltage
Protection) is a feature that allows performance enthusiasts to
use a VDIMM of 2.4V without invalidating their OCZ Lifetime
Warranty.

Installation:
The first step is to get the new RAM installed
and make sure everything is working correctly. As usual, the
installation is easy, barring the occasional hang-up regarding the
motherboard correctly reading the SPD. In this case, with
everything set to Auto, the RAM booted into Windows just fine.

Using CPU-Z, we can see that this memory utilizes
"Enhanced Performance Profiles", the NVIDIA developed standard
whereas additional RAM profiles can be read by supported nForce
motherboards. NVIDIA calls memory that utilizes EPP "SLi-ready
memory". In the case of non-EPP capable motherboards, the
memory reverts to the standard JEDEC method of reading the SPD.

In this case, the RAM
booted up under the JEDEC #3 profile, running at 400MHz (DDR2-800)
with 5-5-5-15 timings. In order to utilize the advertised 3-4-4-15
timings on a non-EPP motherboard, the settings will have to be set
manually in BIOS.
UPDATE: We have confirmed with OCZ
that the voltage specs on their website are incorrect. OCZ will
update their website to show the correct specs of 2.3V and EVP up to
2.4V.
| CPU: |
Q6600 @ 2.4GHz, 1.225V |
| Motherboard: |
DFI Lan Party P35-T2R |
| GPU: |
OCZ 8800GTX, 648MHz-1674MHz-1050MHz |
| Case: |
Danger Den Torture Rack |
| Sound: |
X-Fi XtremeMusic |
| Cooling: |
AeroCool SilverWind |
| Hard Drives: |
1x500GB
Seagate Barracuda
2x150GB Raptor X |
To test the RAM, it will be installed into the
above test system. Throughout testing, the CPU was kept at the
stock speed of 2.4GHz in order keep different speeds from skewing
the results. This means that various FSB speeds, multipliers,
and dividers were utilized to make this happen. The only
exception was the last batch of tests, whereas the only goal was to
see how far the RAM could be pushed.
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