OCZ DDR2 PC2-6400 / 800MHz / Fatal1ty Edition / EPP-Ready / 4GB Dual Channel
The OCZ Fatal1ty series is the official memory for the Championship Gaming Series. These high-performance memory kits were co-developed with the expertise of the world’s 12-time champion to meet the needs of fellow gamers, and are designed to help deliver exceptional gaming visuals and overclocking potential to ensure your high-powered gaming PC maintains unsurpassed stability.
The OCZ Fatal1ty memory kits feature aggressive latencies, high densities,, and blazing frequencies to help DirectX-10 PC games reach their full potential on the latest platforms. Fatal1ty memory kits also feature EPP profiles as an additional “plug and play” overclocking tool on DDR2 NVIDIA gaming platforms.
* EPP-Ready memory modules will automatically boot at the rated specs on NVIDIA nForce platforms.
**XTC (Xtreme Thermal Convection) heatspreaders optimize the thermal management of memory modules by promoting greater airflow by means of micro-convection throughout what is usually the dead air space inside conventional heatspreader designs. In this manner, build-up of heat is avoided and thermal dissipation of the memory components is offloaded more efficiently through the honeycomb design. At the same time, mechanical stability is maintained.
***OCZ EVP (Extended Voltage Protection) is a feature that allows performance enthusiasts to use a VDIMM of 2.2V without invalidating their
OverClock Intelligence Agency "Setting the timings and voltage manually in the system BIOS, the OCZ modules easily boot at their rated specs. OCZ has a fine looking set of memory here. As usual, the design is great, the heat spreaders look good and feel sturdy and with the Fatal1ty name on them I'm sure they'll be very popular with gamers. There were no problems getting them to boot, either with automatic timings or when manually set to their rated specs, and they've run flawlessly in two different systems. If you're building a gaming system the OCZ PC2-6400 4Gb kit will perform well and even overclock a bit."