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AMD Ryzen 9 7900X3D CPU $949 | Kingston FURY Beast 32GB (2x16GB) 5600MHz CL36 DDR5 RAM $179 Delivered + SurCh @ Shopping Express

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Shopping Express is running deals on Ryzen 9 7900X3D and Kingston Fury Beast 2x16GB DDR5 RAM till 14 Mar.

1% surcharge for Card & PayPal payments.

AMD Ryzen 9 7900X3D 5.6GHz 12 Cores 24 Threads AM5 CPU

  • Clock Speed (GHz): 4.4GHz
  • Boost Clock Speed (GHz): 5.6GHz
  • Number of Cores: 12
  • Number of Threads: 24
  • Unlocked (Overclockable): No
  • Integrated Graphics: AMD Radeon Graphics
  • CPU Cooler Included: No
  • Motherboard Compatibility: AM5 (X670 - X670E - B650 - B650E)
  • Socket: AM5

Kingston Fury Beast 32GB (2x16GB) 5600MHz CL36 Black DDR5 Desktop RAM Memory

  • Kit: 2x16GB
  • RAM Clock Speed: 5600MHz
  • CL Timing: 36
  • Voltage: 1.25V
  • Memory Type: DDR5
  • Colour: Black
  • Capacity-ram: 32GB

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closed Comments

  • +1

    I saw a lot of people saying you need 6000mhz cl30 to make proper use of the 7xxx series amd cpus.
    is this true? Why are companies (like bpctech) doing 5600mhz cl40 (or around that) ram in their builds?

    • I assume it's because AMD 7000 series officially supports up to 5200MHz.

    • What I don't know about this is plenty, I assume it's that these 5600mhz memory can be easily overclocked to 6000mhz, which is the supposed sweet spot for AM5 boards.

    • +4

      Here are some recent videos from HUB that went into this topic:

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qLjAs_zoL7g

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MOatIQuQo3s

      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XW2rubC5oCY

      The short answer is that yes, slower memory hurts AM5 more than Intel 13th Gen. As for why companies are doing it, the answer is always the same: because they think people will buy it. Keep in mind most (not all) people buying pre-builts are largely a different group of people to those who even understand what CL numbers mean, let alone have researched memory scaling differences between different CPU lines.

      • +1

        They also say that the X3D chips are less memory speed and timing sensitive because they have more cache. They're also largely of the opinion that the 7900X3D is pointless.

        • +2

          Agree! Still better to get higher speed memory. Since AM5 is future proof for couple of gens, we dont know how those future processors react to memory speeds.

      • Greatly appreciated. Seems like given the minimal (or often 0) price difference, I'm better off getting 6000mhz cl30.

        • +1

          These overclock easily to cl30 6000mhz and perform better than samsung b die.

          • @cooleagles: Ah, thanks for that info.
            I haven't looked much into ddr5, so the overclocking capabilities and such are new to me

    • +1

      Hardware unbox explain it in this YouTube video.

      https://youtu.be/XW2rubC5oCY

  • -4

    Shitty price and shitty timing

    • -1

      yeah, tell me thats not a bad price, and CL36 for the speed is good timing. yeah.

  • this or Corsair Vengeance 32GB (2x16GB) 6000MHz CL40 DDR5 ?

    • This for same price. The Kingston are guaranteed to have SK Hynix chips as Kingstin never uses Samsung chips.

      • So they would be better then 6000 Hz Samsung dye ? Interesting

        • +2

          To expand on this a bit since I know people will wonder. goodwillN1 is correct Kingston don't use Samsung chips. With Hynix ram there are two main types, A die and M die.

          A die gets to a higher frequency (This is only relevant with Intel, the highest it goes with AMD is 6400mhz. This is because of the Internal Memory Clock of the CPU), and M die gets better subtimings (While still being able to reach 6400mhz).

          Because the bottleneck for clocking the ram higher than 6400mhz is the actual CPU you're better off getting M die because it hits the frequency cap, but has better subtimings (Both of which are worse on Samsung chips). It also happens to be cheaper.

          The next consideration is important. There is not much silicon quality variance across each die (See "Actual Hardcore Overclocking" on Youtube. He dives into it). Because of this you can buy the cheapest M die kit (This one) and achieve the same result as a high end M die, or A die kit, which might be 3-4 times the price.

          If you are buying DDR5 for AMD. Buy this. It's the cheapest kit you'll get that will hit the performance limit for AMD. Also note that the limitation is hardware, not software. You will not get better RAM performance until you get a better CPU, updating the bios won't change this.

          • @lnb6606: thx, Im looking to upgrade my pc with i5 13600k and wanted to go full ddr5 so i dont have to do it again for few years,
            what ram would you recommend - i was thinking buying Kingston 32GB Kit (2x16GB) DDR5 Fury Renegade RGB 6000MHz C32
            its not badly priced at $280 - prob a bit of overkill but again, not a lot of saving in going for something cheaper and slower

            • +1

              @botchie: Since you're going with the 13600k buy this Hynix A die:

              https://www.newegg.com/global/au-en/g-skill-32gb/p/N82E16820374434?Item=N82E16820374434&Description=G.Skill%20Trident%20z5&cm_re=G.Skill_Trident%20z5--20-374-434--Product&quicklink=true

  • +2

    Bad deal, AM5 golden value combo of 7800X3D + ASRock B650 HDV being released in 2 weeks

    • Calling a $700+ CPU "golden value" seems a bit of an exaggeration

      • -1

        Golden value of 7000 x3d chips is probably what they were going for.

    • Price? With shipping?

      • +1

        The US prices converted have the CPU around $700 and the motherboard around $200 but then of course we usually get a bit of a price bump because of GST and stuff

  • +1

    Doesn't seem worth the extra $300 over a 13700K, but it seems gamers will pay anything for a 5% higher frame rate shrug

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