Kingston HyperX Genesis 8GB DDR3 1600 Memory Kit Review
Test system & installation
Before we look closer at this memory, here is the test system that we will be using for all memory reviews. All testing was done on a fresh install of Windows 7 Professional 64-bit running with the fewest existing processes as possible. Our memory test system contains an Intel Sandy Bridge i7 2600K CPU on the ASUS P8P67 Pro motherboard using the Intel P67 chipset. We used the latest beta BIOS version 1850 from ASUS because this version introduced some stability enhancements compared to the previous BIOS version. BIOS version 1850 has performed properly and has remained stable in all of our daily use and testing.
Our 2600K CPU is overclocked to 4.4GHz for all of our tests by raising the CPU multiplier to 44x from within the P8P67 Pros UEFI BIOS. Enhanced Intel SpeedStep Technology (EIST) is enabled, but Turbo Mode is disabled. All other CPU and chipset options are left at their default values unless indicated otherwise in the tests that follow.
We will be comparing the HyperX kit to three other 8GB kits we have tested recently: two from Corsair that both ran at similar 1600MHz speed and one kit from Crucial that was designed for 2000MHz operation but was limited to 1866MHz in our test system. Memory is run in dual channel mode throughout our testing.
Memory Test System |
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Processor |
Intel Core i7 2600K (4.4GHz) |
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Motherboard |
ASUS P8P67 Pro |
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Memory |
Kingston HyperX KHX1600C9AD3K2/4G |
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Video Card |
2x Nvidia GTX 470 in SLI |
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Hard Drive |
96GB OCZ Vertex SSD |
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Cooling |
Corsair H50 |
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Power Supply |
1000W Kingwin MK-1000W |
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Chassis |
LanCool Dragonlord PC-K60 |
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Join us on the next page as we begin testing this kit.
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