Testseek.com have collected 23 expert reviews of the Kingston PC3-11000 1375MHz HyperX Series and the average rating is 75%. Scroll down and see all reviews for Kingston PC3-11000 1375MHz HyperX Series.
February 2008
(75%)
23 Reviews
Average score from experts who have reviewed this product.
Kingston was one of the first manufacturers to push DDR3 sticks out of its doors, indicating that its serious about making a name for itself with the new standard. As if to back this up, the company has also launched this memory under its KHX brand, a...
Since its clear that Kingston has taken this RAM to within an inch of its abilities, it isnt overclockable unless you relax the latency timings. Its debatable whether its sensible to spend almost £300 on this RAM when theres bound to be better (an...
Abstract: A PC’s Random Access Memory is an often under-appreciated and underestimated component. New video cards, processors or motherboards tend to generate a great deal more buzz than new memory kits. Undoubtedly the effect high-speed RAM has on the framerat...
If youre looking to enter the DDR3 market at a level you can afford, the Kingston HyperX DDR3-1375MHz can be purchased for $183 from shop.kingston.com. As youve seen, it can handle benchmarking quite well, and keep its performance at the top. While ...
Will perform from DDR31067 to over DDR31375highly flexible, Low voltage, from DDR3 standard 1.5v to 1.7v, Lifetime warranty, Excellent customer support
Limited availability, Some may find Kingstons concept of having to overclock to get the advertised settings undesirable
During our conversation, Louis made the comment that Kingston considers the HyperX DDR3-1375 kit an entry-level DDR3 enthusiast memory, considering that Kingston now has DDR3-1600 and DDR3-1800 kits out.The Kingston HyperX PC3-11000 KHX11000D3LLK2/2G ...
Abstract: Overall, I was pleased with my experience with Kingstons HyperX 2x1GB 1375MHz DDR3 Kit. Aesthetically, Im a fan of Kingstons signature blue heatsinks. The build quality of the DIMMs was excellent, with the heatspreaders mounted properly and making c...
Abstract: In September we ran a round-up of DDR2 and DDR3 memory and there was a notable casualty as Kingston's KHX11000 D3LL DDR3 memory came out of it looking rather limp. Since then we've returned the KHX11000 to Kingston and had a number of conversations with ...
Offers solid performance beyond the typical 1333MHz plateau, Competitively priced with slower DDR3 with looser timings, Respectable timings (7-7-7-20 at 1375MHz), Already overclocked at the rated speed, but able to squeeze out a few more MHz anyway, Kings...
1375MHz is an odd frequency to choose, Effectively an overclocked DDR3 1066MHz kit, Heatspreader doesnt make contact with all memory chips
The Kingston HyperX 2GB PC3-11000 DDR3 Dual Channel Memory Kit intrigued me from the start due to its unique speed rating. With an E6850 Intel Core 2 Duo processor featuring a 1333MHz bus, I was interested in taking a look at a memory kit capable of at...
If you're not immediately turned off by the huge price differential between DDR2 and DDR3 and have decided that you really need to build a system using DDR3, the OCZ modules are the better buy. This is purely because of the warranted extended voltage p...
With new DDR3 kits hitting the market on an almost daily basis, it's an unfortunate fact that the Kingston HyperX PC3-11000 CL7 kit has already been superseded by insanely fast PC3-14400 and PC3-16000 kits. In fact, shortly after we started this review, K...