Testseek.co.uk have collected 8 expert reviews of the Patriot Memory PC3-15000 1866MHz Viper Xtreme Division 2 Series and the average rating is 93%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Patriot Memory PC3-15000 1866MHz Viper Xtreme Division 2 Series.
(93%)
8 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Abstract: Patriot shoots straight for an available multiplier with its DDR3-1866 Enhanced Latency Kit, yet retains the 1.65 V rating that many current users claim to be excessive. Whether or not settings in excess of 1.60 V are really useful likely depends on platform specifics, but we at least know that 1.65 V is suppo..
Abstract: Everyone remembers the good old days, when we would stay up all night tweaking our memory until we could bleed every small megahertz out of it. One of my greatest experiences was a 2GB kit of Patriot Vipers that were covered in green heat spreaders; d...
Although it's the top performer in today’s comparison, Geil’s lack of U.S. availability makes it impossible to include in any value comparison, which obviously requires that we consider a price tag. That leaves Crucial’s middle-of-the-pack Ballstix DDR...
XMP Profile, Good Performance, Lifetime Warranty, Quality design
Timings are a little higher (9-11-9-27)
Patriot has come through again with another quality memory kit. In our test the performance was very good and our system ran stable without any issues. The timings were a little high for a DDR3 kit, we are normally used to seeing 9-9-9-24, but on thi...
The Viper Xtreme Division 2 memory is Patriot’s high performance offering and as such has a high frequency rating, relatively tight timings and support for Intel’s latest CPU architecture via 1.65V power rating and XMP support. All of these gave the Di...
Abstract: Unlike our neighbors down south, everyone knows the Canadian military consists of only about three people: The guy who appears on TV all the time, the security guard who eats donuts while watching hockey, and the janitor who cleans the washroom. A coup...
So the P67 chipset has hit a bit of a snag when it comes to this controller issue with possible degrading performance and loss of data on the SATA 2.0 ports over time. While it's a pain, you have to applaud Intel for coming out and attacking the issu...