Proximon,
I'd like to make a suggestion of a little more detail to add under the Memory - P55 section. I have seen a large number of posters buy 1600, 2000 or greater RAM and then be disappointed when they couldn't get their RAM to run at those speeds without a lot of BIOS manipulation. From my experience, the P55 motherboards allow a max memory multiplier of (effectively) x10 for the i5 750 and x12 for the i7 8xx. I don't know if this is 100% across all motherboards, but in my experience helping others I haven't yet seen any deviations. Maybe others can provide some feedback if they know of any motherboards that operate differently.
My suggestion is to add the following a comment to your section that reads:
P55 RAM
RAM for the i5/i7 LGA 1156 CPUs and MBs is purchased in pairs. It is DDR3 and needs to have a voltage at or below 1.65V.
So that it reads:
P55 RAM
RAM for the i5/i7 LGA 1156 CPUs and MBs is purchased in pairs. It is DDR3 and needs to have a voltage at or below 1.65V.
Intel officially supports 1066 and 1333 frequency memory on the P55. Most motherboards allow the i7 8xx chips to run memory at 1600. If you have an i5 750 or i7 8xx and are NOT interested in OCing or are NOT comfortable changing BIOS settings such as BCLK, CPU multiplier, memory multiplier, memory timings (CAS-tRCD-tRP-tRAS), EIST, C-states, Turbo, etc. then it is recommended the max frequency you get is 1333 for an i5 750, and 1600 for an i7 8xx. Remember, timings, also referred to as latency, is more important than the frequency of the RAM.
Hopefully if people are reading your guide this will cut down on the number of Why isn't the 2000 RAM I paid for running at 2000!! problems.
I'd like to make a suggestion of a little more detail to add under the Memory - P55 section. I have seen a large number of posters buy 1600, 2000 or greater RAM and then be disappointed when they couldn't get their RAM to run at those speeds without a lot of BIOS manipulation. From my experience, the P55 motherboards allow a max memory multiplier of (effectively) x10 for the i5 750 and x12 for the i7 8xx. I don't know if this is 100% across all motherboards, but in my experience helping others I haven't yet seen any deviations. Maybe others can provide some feedback if they know of any motherboards that operate differently.
My suggestion is to add the following a comment to your section that reads:
P55 RAM
RAM for the i5/i7 LGA 1156 CPUs and MBs is purchased in pairs. It is DDR3 and needs to have a voltage at or below 1.65V.
So that it reads:
P55 RAM
RAM for the i5/i7 LGA 1156 CPUs and MBs is purchased in pairs. It is DDR3 and needs to have a voltage at or below 1.65V.
Intel officially supports 1066 and 1333 frequency memory on the P55. Most motherboards allow the i7 8xx chips to run memory at 1600. If you have an i5 750 or i7 8xx and are NOT interested in OCing or are NOT comfortable changing BIOS settings such as BCLK, CPU multiplier, memory multiplier, memory timings (CAS-tRCD-tRP-tRAS), EIST, C-states, Turbo, etc. then it is recommended the max frequency you get is 1333 for an i5 750, and 1600 for an i7 8xx. Remember, timings, also referred to as latency, is more important than the frequency of the RAM.
Hopefully if people are reading your guide this will cut down on the number of Why isn't the 2000 RAM I paid for running at 2000!! problems.