Memory compatibility with Core i7-870
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1 | Hi, I was looking here but when it started talking about voltages I backed off. Edited by bit at 5:27 am, Wed 30 Dec bit - 2020-12-30 05:18:00 |
2 | i7-870 or i7-8700k mrfxit - 2020-12-30 07:29:00 |
3 | according to here No - max 1333MHz king1 - 2020-12-30 07:51:00 |
4 | mrfxit wrote: Edited by bit at 8:34 am, Wed 30 Dec bit - 2020-12-30 08:32:00 |
5 | Most ram have a timing table with lower frequencies than the max clock. acura - 2020-12-30 10:59:00 |
6 | Forget about increasing voltages or overclocking, it's not worthwhile on such an old system and will likely hasten it's demise. You can slot 1600 in and it'll run at 1333mHz just fine, if possible run two (or four) sticks rather than one (dual channel is a little faster) vtecintegra - 2020-12-30 11:01:00 |
7 | vtecintegra wrote: bit - 2020-12-30 15:46:00 |
8 | vtecintegra wrote: Anything will do fine but if you can find some 12800mhz ram, that would be a nice upgrade in dual channel mode Not a dramatic increase in speed but it's like adding a few layers of icing on that cake. mrfxit - 2020-12-31 08:16:00 |
9 | mrfxit wrote: bit - 2020-12-31 13:57:00 |
10 | RAM still on the way. (12800mhz) bit - 2021-01-03 06:32:00 |
11 | Its not the speed you should be worried about, fast ram will generally run slower, its the voltage. Without going and looking for you you need to check if the gen of ram you are buying runs at the voltage your board provides on its sockets. ronaldo8 - 2021-01-04 10:29:00 |
12 | Who said anything about overclocking ? The OP didn't, infact just the opposite, he's looking to underclock it. Nor is he trying to overvolt it. However he may well end up overvolting it accidentally if his generational mismatch is wide enough. Some sticks are resillent enough to run at older generation voltages, often those made around the date if the transition are designed with chips made with higher input range but eventually they end up going to less bandwidth as time goes on in the quest for tighter timings and performance. This something of a repeating pattern in electronics design. ronaldo8 - 2021-01-04 11:49:00 |
13 | Op it would help if you listed the part number and brand of the ram you are looking at not just the details you thought important, by doing so you are prefiltering information for those you seek help from, a classic pain in the arse on this board that puts many questions in the too hard/can't be bothered basket. Then you could be given a definitive answer. Nothing personal, it happens all the time in all diagnostic situations. ronaldo8 - 2021-01-04 11:57:00 |
14 | I hear you Ronaldo. I haven't changed the RAM yet. I've only changed the CPU. bit - 2021-01-04 20:28:00 |