I certainly wouldn't go for PC2 3200 because thats slower than he has fitted at present.
That's true, it is slower. I suggested it because PC2-3200 in dual-channel would have the same bandwidth as the CPU's 800MHz FSB. But at the same time I realize ditching the 4200 stick doesn't make much sense.
When it comes to memory configurations, I'm a stickler for matching the memory bus/bandwidth evenly with the FSB when possible. I've always felt having a 1:1 ratio is better than going with a slightly faster memory module which introduces more latency into the equation.
But I guess that's a matter of preference!
so a pair of modules will gain you a few percent performance increase(anything between 1-4%) not much but it's there
The performance gains of dual-channel vary depending on the situation. In the days of DDR1 400MHz, Intel was just starting to release CPUs with an 800MHz FSB. Because DDR1 400MHz was the fastest technology available, the solution was to run two modules in dual-channel to match the memory bus (200MHz) and bandwidth (6.4GB/s). In many tests, you would see anywhere from 15-30% increases by using dual-channel over single-channel.
On the Athlon XP side of the coin, the frontside bus was still stuck at 400MHz. The Athlon 64 hadn't been released yet which introduced the Hypertransport interface (speeds of 800MHz and beyond). So as a result, people who ran dual-channel on the XP boards saw very little if any difference (less than 5% in most cases). A lot of people had the tendency to trash-talk the new technology for that reason not realizing how much it helped on Intel boards.
When DDR2 first came out at 400MHz (100MHz x 4), it was pointless to buy. Running DDR1 in dual-channel was faster because the memory bus was clocked at 200MHz instead of DDR2's slower 100MHz. DDR2 didn't gain popularity until 1066MHz and faster FSB's became mainstream which stretched beyond DDR1's reach.
So the moral of the novel is it depends on the CPU and whether you're talking about DDR1 or DDR2...
~cdogg
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