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PS3 memory rumour mill turns again

Sources close to the memory manufacturers working on cutting-edge technology for the PlayStation 3 have apparently leaked information about the specs of the console, and interesting hints about early shipment volumes.

In the ongoing quest to guess what's going to go inside the PlayStation 3, the most useful sources of information so far (aside from Sony's own rumblings about the Cell microprocessor) have been the companies contracted to make memory chips for the console.

Once again this week the memory manufacturers appear to have done a convincing leaky sieve impression, with strong rumours suggesting that they have revealed the amount of RAM which the PS3 will boast, and giving an idea of what volume of consoles Sony hopes to manufacture in the first year.

Online sources are today reporting that the console will incorporate four XDR-DRAM chips, for a total of 256MB of main RAM - an eight-fold increase over the 32MB found in the PlayStation 2. The memory bus speed is also significantly faster than the PS2's.

The three memory suppliers working on XDR-DRAM chips are Elpida, Toshiba and Samsung, all of which are expected to supply chips for the PS3 - although only Elpida has been announced as an official supplier so far.

As reported earlier, the three manufacturers will begin bulk production of the RAM in early 2005, and expect to produce some 20 million XDR-DRAM chips within that year - meaning that Sony could potentially build 5 million units of the PS3 by the end of 2005, enough for a reasonably sized launch (over a million units) in all three major territories.

The yield for 2006 is expected to be in the region of 30 million chips - enough to build 7.5 million PS3s. This is a surprisingly low figure, however - given the speed with which Sony shipped PlayStation 2's in the first year of the consoles lifespan, surely it would be hoping for more than 12.5 million PS3s on the market by the end of 2006, assuming a late 2005 launch?

Could it be that Sony's ambitious technical specifications for the PS3, featuring leading-edge RAM and CPU technologies, may restrict supplies of the console - or does the giant manufacturer have an ace up its sleeve?

Author
Rob Fahey avatar

Rob Fahey

Contributing Editor

Rob Fahey is a former editor of GamesIndustry.biz who spent several years living in Japan and probably still has a mint condition Dreamcast Samba de Amigo set.