07-29-2015, 10:23 PM
Of course.
But what in the heck would you need the ram chips running at a higher speed for? DDR 3 allows for 2,133MTps. If you removed the DDRs, took regular old sdram and super clocked it to 2,133MTps, you would end up with similar data transfer performance at a much higher power consumption on top of introducing stability issues when the errors multiply.
But what in the heck would you need the ram chips running at a higher speed for? DDR 3 allows for 2,133MTps. If you removed the DDRs, took regular old sdram and super clocked it to 2,133MTps, you would end up with similar data transfer performance at a much higher power consumption on top of introducing stability issues when the errors multiply.

