ddutta wrote:How is Kingmax compared to Kingston and Crucial? I have bought 1GB for a T42 and I plan to buy another one.
-D
I'm not familiar with Kingmax so I can't comment on it.
My comments are based on over 25 years of first hand experience as a consultant and manufacturing engineer based out of the Silicon Valley. At one time or another I've been involved in all phases of chip manufacturing; I worked for a company that sold all of the perishable products used to make silicon wafers. I used to call on printed circuit board manufacturers including those who made memory modules and so on.
I've been to Micron's facility in Idaho as well as a number of Intel plants. Over the past 15 years, manufacturing in the Silicon Valley changed from making chips and components to building the automated equipment used in these processes so I have insight into a lot of manufacturing problems.
Kingston, Corsair, Viking, Samsung, Siemens (Infineon), Micron (Crucial) Mushkin and a number of other memory makers produce premium quality memory that uses matched chips and undergoes rigorous testing.
Kingston and Corsair and others have economy lines of memory that they sell under their own brand name which confuses consumers: Kingston ValuRam for example.
I've had problems on at least 4 occasions with the lower quality line of memory from both of these manufacturers. Note, their premium memory should be first class, I'm talking about the stuff that is sold at bargain prices.
I got a deal that was too good to pass up on a bunch of Kingston ValuRam at an Office Depot: PC100, PC133 and DDR266. I bought it for upgrading friend PCs and to trow into several of my non critical systems.
I had problems with half of this memory. In several cases, the density was wrong and it didn't work in systems Kingston said it would, in others, it was just plain bad memory!
When I install memory in a system, I test it with Memtest386 and DocMem software. I let Memtest386 run all night. I was surprised at the bad memory and gave it the benefit of the doubt by trying it in at least 1 other system with the same results.
Kingston was good at replacing the defective memory but it was a waste of my time. Now I only use memory that I know to be premium quality. I've been using Micron's Crucial brand of memory since they first started marketing it. I've been completely satisfied with it.
The brand name on the chips on a memory module mean nothing. All memory chipmakers produce chips in several quality levels.
Samsung, Siemens (Infineon), Micron (Crucial) are chip makers who also produce finished memory. Most other memory modules are made by independent fabricators who buy memory chips and mount them on the small printed circuit boards.
Intermittent memory problems are hard to diagnose and can drive you nuts. I can never fathom folks who spend a small fortune on a computer and want to save a few bucks on one of the most crucial (play on words) component in their system.
Chas.
701cs, 755c, 755cx, 240x, T20, X31