Dual rank Hynix M-die, tunable to run 6000Mhz CL36 @ 1.35V
CMK64GX5M2B5600C40
2Rx8, XMP CL40-40-40-77 @ 1.25V, Solid Aluminum Heatspreader
Dual rank Hynix M-die, tunable to run 6000Mhz CL36 @ 1.35V
CMK64GX5M2B5600C40
2Rx8, XMP CL40-40-40-77 @ 1.25V, Solid Aluminum Heatspreader
Can someone give me the tl;dr of RAM with Hynix die? What's the good stuff, and what's the okay stuff? Also, does it really matter if you're not planning to overclock or tune your memory?
I'm looking to pick up a 32GB DDR5 RAM kit soon to go along with a Ryzen 7000 CPU (I haven't decided which one to get yet).
i think most of the talk is about getting cheaper kits (ones with slightly lower advertised speeds and timings) but getting the hynix-m or A variants which have higher OC'ability, meaning with a bit of reading around and tampering in the BIOS you can get it to run at the recommended speeds (say 6000mt for zen4 chips), for cheaper than if you were to straight up buy the 6000/cl30 kit
edit: afaik the "Kingston FURY Beast 32 GB (2 x 16 GB) DDR5-5600 CL36 Memory" fits the bill and is only $169
This is some of the very first ddr5 memory that come out, some people report alot of instability when run at xmp.
Thankyou chatGPT and price protection