As a different sort of answer, the fastest DDR3 for your computer will be whatever the motherboard manual tells you it is. For example, if the motherboard can’t handle RAM faster than 1600Mhz, then don’t bother buying faster RAM than that, because it won’t matter and you’ll be throwing your money away.
There are timing values in DDR3 chips beyond just the base clock tolerance, but they’re relatively minor compared to that.
Also, pay attention to what the motherboard manual tells you about how to pair the RAM cards. A lot of computers, especially laptops, can handle having only one SODIMM instead of populating both slots, but the manual will warn you that doing so will cut your RAM bandwidth in half because that cuts the databus in half and requires the CPU to do two memory accesses for everyone that would’ve been required if you had both populated. So for laptops, a single 8GB SODIMM might not be as good as 2 4GB SODIMMs. I don’t know if any desktop motherboards work the same way, but they might.
Basically DDR3 sees small benefits at 1600 (2400 being the fastest I’ve heard about for improvements…but 1600 being within a few 1–6 FPS of a 2400 and is around 50–150 Cheaper. That’s for Intels… For AMD 1866 is the standard, with minor improvements for higher speed.
Basically DDR3 sees small benefits at 1600 (2400 being the fastest I’ve heard about for improvements…but 1600 being within a few 1–6 FPS of a 2400 and is around 50–150 Cheaper. That’s for Intels… For AMD 1866 is the standard, with minor improvements for higher speed.
Swapping out your RAM is one of the quickest, easiest things you can do to upgrade your computer, and it's usually a fairly affordable option, too. This twin pack of 8gb memory sticks (for a total of 16gb) is suitable for bringing most computers made in the last five or six years up to current RAM standards. You can do some good gaming with this in your tower, too (though an upgrade to 32gb would be even better).
My wife's windows machine came with 8GB of RAM. Which was fine for some multi-tabbed web browsing and light photo editing. Since then, we've done a lot more video editing of footage we've taken of the kids. 8GB gets us into cache territory which means the machine runs a lot slower. And every adjustment is a hiccup.
The new Crucial Ballistix Gaming kit is awesome! The design is super clean and without RGB. It is super easy to overclock using XMP 2.0. Micron states the Ballistix Gaming kit has been engineered for AMD and Intel. I installed it on my Strix B450 motherboard with a Ryzen 5 2600 CPU. I set the XMP and it automatically went to 3200. I didn't mess with the stock timings because they are already pretty good. 2nd gen Ryzen CPU's like good memory and I was able to push my 2600 a little harder from 4Ghz to 4.225Ghz stable. I know it's not a huge increase but it just shows how good the die quality is. I'm sure tweaking the timings could get me a little more but I'm happy where my PC is at right now.
Designed with the third and fourth generation Intel users in mind, the Corsair Vengeance Pro may just be the best DDR3 RAM 8gb for someone that wants to bet on overclocking. It keeps in touch with what others in the vengeance line have maintained. While the performance comes with vengeance, the looks do also come very aggressive with aluminum heat spreaders that keep you covered as regards heat management. The vengeance spreader performs very well.
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Donald replied
268 weeks ago