*Review: Legit-Reviews (
http://www.legitreviews.com/article/551/1/)*
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The DDR3 memory market is very small as just the Intel P35 Express chipset has a memory controller that supports DDR3 memory modules, but that doesn't mean memory companies have been ignoring this niche market. With several motherboards now supporting DDR3 memory kits and many more on the way later this year when Intel releases the X38 Express chipset more and more gamers are starting to look at DDR3 memory kits to see if it is right for their upgrade path. When DDR3 memory kits first started came out a number of months ago 1333MHz memory kits seemed to be the standard for gaming systems. Leading memory companies Corsair, Kingston, OCZ and Super Talent all released PC3-10666 (1333MHz) kits, but the timings ranged from CL7 to CL9. As the weeks went by it seems Corsair, OCZ and Super Talent went to improve clock frequency, while Kingston aimed at tighter timings on their current speed grade. In its second foray into the DDR3 overclocking market, Kingston's ultra low-latency 1375MHz, CL5 product is the first production DDR3 module to achieve CL5 timings at PC11000 frequencies (1375MHz).
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