Wednesday, May 22, 2013
Search
  
Most Popular
Hardware Reviews
PC Parts
Kingston DataTraveler Ultimate 3.0 G3 32GB
Kingston HyperX 10th Anniversary Edition 1866MHz 8GB Memory Kit review
Kingston HyperX Beast 2133 4x2GB Kit Review
OCZ Vector 256GB SSD
PC POWER COOLING Silencer MKIII 750W review
WEB Reviews
Seagate Enterprise Capacity 3.5 V.3 4TB SAS 6Gb/s HDD Review
OCZ Vector 256GB SSD Review @ Custom PC Review
Gigabyte F2A85XM-D3H
NZXT Phantom 630
Auvio Bluetooth Portable Speaker Review
Corsair H90 CPU Cooler Review
BIOSTAR Hi-Fi Z77X (Intel Z77) Motherboard Review
Noctua NH-L9i Cooler Review on Technic3D
Breaking News
New Intel CEO Shakes Up Company
Nokia Adds LiveSight Tool To Here Maps
Sony To Implement New Strategy to Enhance Group's Value
Samsung Set to Buy Stake in Rival Pantech
Battlefield 4 Coming In Both Xbox One and PlayStation 4
Innodisk Releases Industrial-Embedded SATA nanoSSD
Toshiba's Latest Enterprise-Class HDDs and SSDs Available In Europe
MSI Unveils AMD Richland A10 Powered Gaming Laptops
Home > Hardware Reviews > PC Parts

Tuesday, June 17, 2008
Crucial BallistiX Tracer PC2-6400

2. Retail package

Crucial's retail package of the Ballistix Tracer (BL2KIT25664AR804) includes a 4GB kit (2GBx2) and it is sold online for around ~$150 . The kit we received is packed in a common carton box, inside antistatic plastic bags.

The memory modules are rather unique with the red colour and of course the BallistiX Tracer logos placed on both sides of the aluminum heatspreaders.

The BallistiX Tracer memories include LEDs on the top that glow when the memory is used.

There are two rows of eight "chasing" red and green LEDs at top the module, circulating in a random pattern based on memory utilization. A circuit relays bus activity to the LEDs, allowing them to reflect usage of each memory module.

CPU-Z provides more information about the memory. The Crucial BallistiX Tracer PC2-6400 2x2GB memory supports Nvidia's EPP profile for both 400MHz and 500MHz frequencies with up to 2.2V. The embedded JEDEC timings for 333 and 400MHz are rather relaxed; tightest timings will be examined later in this review:

More information is provided by Everest edition




Get RSS feed Easy Print E-Mail this Message


 
Home | News | All News | Reviews | Articles | Guides | Download | Expert Area | Forum | Site Info
Site best viewed at 1024x768+ - CDRINFO.COM 1998-2013 - All rights reserved -
Privacy policy - Contact Us .