Overclocking Performance (Highest Speed)

The Corsair Dominator PC2-8888 is rated at DDR2-1111 4-4-4-12, and we managed to reach that performance level on the ASUS P5W-DH Deluxe. As we've said before, the ratios on the ASUS 975X board are very demanding, and the earlier Dominator 1142 did not do nearly as well on this board. Top speed for the Corsair Dominator PC2-8888 was DDR2-1130, which is not much of an overclock going from 4-4-4 timings to 5-5-5 timings on the 975X. In fact OCZ Flex XLC managed to reach 1172 on this same board, but it is the only memory we have tested that performed better than the Dominator 1111 on this board.

With Dominator doing so well at 4-4-4 timings, it is probably best to only go to FSB speeds that Dominator can handle at 4-4-4 timings. Sticking to 4-4-4 timings will likely give you the best performance possible with this outstanding memory.

The Corsair Dominator on the NVIDIA 680i behaved like an entirely different memory, reaching much higher performance levels and overclocks than could be achieved on the P5W-DH. On the 680i the Dominator reached a stable DDR2-1315, which is the fastest performance we have ever measured on this board. Even more significantly, Dominator PC2-8888 was able to run all our benchmarks at 4-4-4 timings at DDR2-1233. This speed at 4-4-4 timings yielded top-notch performance in all our benchmarks. There are two components to memory performance - speed and memory timings - and the Corsair Dominator 1111 appears to excel in both areas.

Highest Memory Speed

Only one other memory is in the same performance ball park with Dominator, and that is OCZ Flex XLC. Flex XLC comes close on the 680i, but Dominator wins in raw speed and best timings at a given speed. On the ASUS P5W-DH OCZ Flex seems to have the current compatibility edge. Dominator is fast on the 975x, but Flex edges it out for top performance on that platform. Given the 680i performance, however, we expect Corsair may well be able to push Dominator to the 975X lead as well - with something as basic as a BIOS or SPD upgrade.

Game Performance Comparison Final Words
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  • classy - Monday, January 1, 2007 - link

    It won't be on memory that gives me an extra 2-5 frames. While it performs well, it just doesn't make enough of a performance impact to warrant the price. Maybe for a dream system but for the other 99.75% of the pc world this memory is clearly a waste of money.
  • code255 - Sunday, January 7, 2007 - link

    Totally agree. Buying super high quality memory is an utter waste of money. Double the cost of normal RAM for like 1% higher framerates? Thanks, but no f***ing thanks!

    I usually buy value RAM from decent manufacturers (which is more expensive than from no-name brands) just for the sake of stability. RAM just doesn't have a significant enough impact on gaming performance to justify the insane prices of the top-of-the-line stuff.
  • tayhimself - Tuesday, January 2, 2007 - link

    This is such another example of reviews driven by ridiculous marketing than by product reviews that may be worthwhile or beneficial to 99% of readers. I don't doubt there are people spending $600 on 2 GB of DDR2 to get that extra 1.5% performance boost, I just doubt there are very many of them.

    A review of value RAM sticks on 965, 975x, or 590 chipsets would be far more useful and informative because of ridiculous compatibility issues with mobos. But alas these reviews rarely happen...
  • bigboxes - Monday, January 1, 2007 - link

    It's nice to see Corsair finally getting back into the game. Here's to prices dropping, though it may be a while. :)

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