
The S2662 had some pretty decent stress testing potential, mostly because it's based on a dual channel chipset (E7205), which is a more complex and difficult chipset to implement (due to signal integrity, among other issues) than the conventional single channel DDR chipsets that dominate today's markets. However, since this BIOS allowed no overclocking whatsoever, our stress tests only consist of memory testing. Here's what we managed to include:
Memory Stress Test Results:
Running two modules of Corsair XMS memory at dual DDR266 should be very easy for the Tyan S2662. Indeed, it was quite easy, although we were of course unable to adjust any timings since the S2662 BIOS contained no such adjustments:
|
Stable Dual DDR266 Timings |
|
|
Clock
Speed:
|
133MHz
|
|
Timing
Mode:
|
N/A
|
|
CAS
Latency:
|
N/A
|
|
Bank
Interleave:
|
N/A
|
|
Precharge to Active:
|
N/A
|
|
Active
to Precharge:
|
N/A
|
|
Active
to CMD:
|
N/A
|
|
Command Rate:
|
N/A
|
Pretty good timings, eh? No, there obviously aren't any timings we can analyze here, but if you skip a few pages to our stock benchmark testing, you'll see that the Tyan S2662 is able to compete admirably with ASUS and Gigabyte's E7205 solutions, which have been tweaked to the max for performance. At dual DDR266, the S2662 was quite stable, as it was able to complete our entire benchmark suite, which includes Sysmark 2002, Quake3 Arena, Jedi Knight II, Unreal Tournament 2003, SPECviewperf 7.0, Sciencemark, and XMPEG. Prime95 ran for only a few hours, since we were strapped for time in getting this review out the door. Still, all in all, our results give a pretty decent indication that the S2662 can handle dual DDR266, and everyone should expect it to.
In this next scenario we test how well the Tyan S2662 can handle a full load of memory modules:
|
Stable Dual DDR266 Timings |
|
|
Clock
Speed:
|
133MHz
|
|
Timing
Mode:
|
N/A
|
|
CAS
Latency:
|
N/A
|
|
Bank
Interleave:
|
N/A
|
|
Precharge to Active:
|
N/A
|
|
Active
to Precharge:
|
N/A
|
|
Active
to CMD:
|
N/A
|
|
Command Rate:
|
N/A
|
Everything ran smoothly with four DIMMs populated running at 266MHz. We were able to complete a few hours of Prime95 torture testing as well as other general apps.
We should remind you that all the E7205 motherboards we've tested here today (S2662 included) can only operate a certain amount of modules in a specific way. You can always operate this board with one module or with two modules installed, that's not surprising. However, if you want to add a third module to memory bank 3 or 4, you won't be so lucky. E7205 motherboards will simply disable the third module, and operate with just the two modules in banks 1 and 2. Clearly though, you'll be able to operate four DIMMs successfully, so there's nothing to worry about there.
Another issue we wanted to explore was how well Granite Bay would be able to run multiple types of memory modules. Therefore, we tested the most stressful situation possible and installed 4 DIMMs into the S2662. One scenario included four Corsair XMS modules installed, and the other dealt with two Corsair XMS modules (Winbond chips) and two Mushkin modules (Winbond chips). We successfully booted into Windows and played around for a while in both scenarios. All of our usual activities (like running XMPEG movies, data compression, DX8 games, etc.) worked perfectly fine in both situations. It seems as if you'll be able to operate different types of memory modules with the S2662, although we would have to do much more testing to be sure.
And I told this thing to show e-mail address. hrumsey@charter.net if anyone has questions.
It also removed paragraph indents that would make the above post a bit more readable- apologies.
And a clarification: The ZCR card could be seen to be flashed only because a jumper change is needed to put them in flash mode. In normal mode, the Thunder K8S Pro S2882 BIOS was squashing the Adaptec 2010S / 2015S BIOS.
Damn, I hope Google indexes that comment well.
Speaking of which, for you-know-who:
Tyan Thunder K8S Pro Adaptec 2010S 2015S ZCR RAID BIOS problem incompatibility bug hang failure download flash PCI-X
Tyan 2882 K8S Pro Thunder ZCR Adaptec 2015S 2010S RAID bug hang failure problem incompatibility PCI-X flash BIOS download
Thunder Tyan 2882 K8S Pro ZCR Adaptec RAID 2010S 2015S BIOS incompatibility problem failure hang PCI-X BIOS bug flash download
wildly incompetent screen-reading technical support monkeys
beta-testing on customers
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