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Storage? I am Storage!
This is a caution mainly for Australian readers, although the product concerned is exported to a number of countries.
Legend PC2700 DDR-SDRAM modules are currently incompatible with Epox 8RDA+ (nForce 2) motherboards when run at their rated speed of 166MHz. Legend is working on the problem.
The modules may be okay at 133MHz - the board booted for me at 150MHz, but I didn't try any extensive stability testing. At 166MHz it won't even POST, regardless of timings.
Presumably the problem does not affect all nForce 2 boards, because Legend also distributes MSI. FWIW, Legend usually uses Hynix chips in their DRAM modules.
In contrast, I found off-the-shelf Transcend DDR333 ran successfully at 190MHz (CAS 2.5). It was retail packaging, but supposedly there is no difference between this and OEM (or so I've been told :-? ).
What I found particularly impressive was achieving stable operation with CAS 2 at 178MHz (5-2-2-2). My experiences with Transcend products (including flash memory) over the last six months have been great.
 My experiences with Transcend products (including flash memory) over the last six months have been great.
			
			Legend PC2700 DDR-SDRAM modules are currently incompatible with Epox 8RDA+ (nForce 2) motherboards when run at their rated speed of 166MHz. Legend is working on the problem.
The modules may be okay at 133MHz - the board booted for me at 150MHz, but I didn't try any extensive stability testing. At 166MHz it won't even POST, regardless of timings.
Presumably the problem does not affect all nForce 2 boards, because Legend also distributes MSI. FWIW, Legend usually uses Hynix chips in their DRAM modules.
In contrast, I found off-the-shelf Transcend DDR333 ran successfully at 190MHz (CAS 2.5). It was retail packaging, but supposedly there is no difference between this and OEM (or so I've been told :-? ).
What I found particularly impressive was achieving stable operation with CAS 2 at 178MHz (5-2-2-2).
 
				 
 
		 
 
		