alyoshka :
Suppose you have 6 slots of RAM. [...] if you use 3 Sticks of RAM in three of those slots they work as Tri Channel RAM.
Not unless you're using an X58 motherboard. The vast majority of boards are only dual channel, with the only exception being those built on Intel's X58 chipset back in 2010 (triple channel) and Intel's X79 chipset now (quad channel). Putting three sticks in any other board will not make it work in triple channel mode. Instead, you still be operating in dual channel, with one of the channels having more available memory. You'd probably be unstable as well. Multi-channel memory is very sensitive to proper pairing, who knows what mixing paired and unpaired would do.
A more accurate description would be this. Your motherboard will have some number of slots, divided up into some number of channels. These will be color coded, with no two slots of the same color being on the same channel. So, if you've got six slots, three red and three black, you've got triple channel memory (N slots of any one color means N channel memory). When you buy a triple channel kit, you'd put each of the modules in the same color slots, so each is sitting in its own channel and can be used simultaneously.
More commonly, you'd see something like six slots with three colors, each color having two slots. So you'd get two red, two black and two blue slots. This is a dual channel configuration, and nothing you do is going to make it triple channel.