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[Back Order] TEAMGROUP T-Create Classic 10L DDR5 32GB Kit (2 x 16GB) 6000MHz (PC5-48000) CL48 RAM $111.89 Delivered @ Amazon AU

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Cheapest DDR5 2 x 16GB 6000Mhz set available. JEDEC spec 1.1v

Edit:

Temporarily out of stock.
Order now and we'll deliver when available. We'll e-mail you with an estimated delivery date as soon as we have more information. Your account will only be charged when we ship the item.

Edit 2:

Price jacked

Price History at C CamelCamelCamel.

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closed Comments

  • +4

    Cl48

    • +2

      10L

  • townsville ahh name

  • +2

    thank you Yangtze Memory…

    I have never seen ram prices going so low for ages. when SAMSUNG/MICRON/HYNIX dominated NAND chips they just keep bumping up price with whatever ridicuous reasons one can think of, FIRE/WATER damage etc… when Yangtze Memory became a serious competitor these guys suddenly have better safty standards in their factories.

    • Doesn't Yangtze only make memory chips for SSDs?

    • SAMSUNG/MICRON/HYNIX

      All memory makers have reduced production or DDR (dram) and SSD (nand flash) chips

      Demand is still very low (China's economy is in the toilet lots less customers) but they are trying to inflate prices by reducing supply… :) prices will start to creep up a little towards the end of the year and start of next but will stay low until demand starts to rise

    • -1

      What a load of misinformation. YMTC makes NAND chips, not RAM.

      Also, YMTC had to drop price to compete. Anything with previous gen YMTC NAND, I just simply return and ask for a full refund. The latest one, so far, no major issue reported. Will latest gen of YMTC QLC be decent enough and priced low enough? Only time will tell. YMTC needs to thank other NAND makers for reducing production because the margin YMTC is operating on isn't good (wouldn't surprise me if Chinese government subsidised YMTC before).

  • +1

    edited : Removed info about the 5600 ram being hynix guaranteed. Read the amazon reviews, and of late, it seems they are no longer supplying hynix as per description. NOTE : this doesn't apply to the OP. I just added info about another set which 'was' guaranted hynix.

    For $112 though, this 6000 ram you have shared is a bargain, and would combo well with a 7800x3d, with very little detriment to gaming fps.

    • +3

      If the 7950X3D scales similarly with RAM speed to the 7800X3D (for which I can't find equivalent benchmarks for), unfortunately RAM speed is still important enough that anyone buying a 7800X3D should still plausibly consider a faster kit: https://www.techspot.com/review/2635-ryzen-7950x3d-memory-sc…

      An extra $37 lets you go from 6000 CL48 to 6000 CL36 (!). At a total system cost of $2k+ that's going to be worthwhile. There's also periodically better deals than what's linked as well.

      • Yeah, even with a X3D chip, ram speed still matters for almost all other tasks (and still a little for gaming).

        Myself, I'm upgrading my sim rig next month from an ancient 7700k to a 7800X3D, and am partnering it with CL30 6000 ram. I'm going CL30 because both CL30 and CL32 at 6000 are guaranteed hynix.

      • Thanks. Do i need to check that the ram is expo compatible and how do i do it if i want to pair it up with 7800x3d?

        • I don't know much about compatibility specifics on current-gen platforms, sorry!

        • Easiest way is to just check to see if it's marketed as expo ram, by searching for 'AMD' and also 'EXPO' on whatever page your checking.

          You can also cross reference the part number (sometimes not shown on a sellers page though…) by a google search, and clicking on the correct manufacturer link to it's dedicated page.

          As an example, here is the ram I will be getting,
          https://www.amazon.com.au/dp/B0CBRJ63RT

          Shows AMD and EXPO on page.

          And a quick google search for "CMK32GX5M2B6000Z30" reveals the manufacturer page, as the 5th link down,
          https://www.corsair.com/us/en/p/memory/cmk32gx5m2b6000z30/ve…

          Note : search for CMK32GX5M2B6000Z30 on the first link, and you will find it's not that ram's page, the page is actually for the CMH32GX5M2B6000Z30K (CMH variant). So gotta be careful, and make sure your getting the right page by searching for the part number again, on each link. i.e. It was in the page of the 5th google link down.

  • -1

    RAM=Kingston

  • +1

    Just a question, I'm a novice PC builder. Is CL48 Timing bad? Does this mean the ram will be unusable for normal usage/very unstable or does this mean it's too slow for usage in PC's? Is this just plug and play in normal AMD and Intel Motherboards? Thanks :)

    • +8

      The latency is on the high side. However, there is a twist to this. It is rated 1.1v and that's likely the reason for the poor / high CL48 value. Majority of faster DDR5-6000 RAM kits would be 1.25V based or higher.

      DDR5 is different to DDR4, since your motherboard needs to do memory training each time you adjust the setting. That training phase can be quite long, especially for DDR5-6000. AMD platform's memory training can take even longer. The other issue is memory QVL. Not having much luck finding this in the QVLs to figure out the memory die type. Check the memory QVL of your motherboard, if it is not on that list, there is no guarantee it is plug and play, especially AMD AM5 platform.

      My guess is this is likely old stock with the XMP coding being quite dated. Don't quote me on it though.

      One good thing is that this is Amazon AU, so if it doesn't work, Amazon AU has a good return policy.

      • Hey Netsurfer! Thanks alot for the detailed response I appreciate it. I've come from inheriting an old pc with DDR3 Ram and a bunch of components from a scrap lot. DDR5, the new MOBO's and 12th gen intel have some very cool but confusing tech so I appreciate it. I think I might hold off on this and go for another kit, especially when I'll be spending hundreds on the other components.

        • +1

          It's sold out at the discounted price now. Anyway, it is good for someone willing to manually set the memory settings. According to an user review, he / she found the kit received has SK Hynix die based DDR5 and managed to overclock it to DDR5-6200 CL34. However, no voltage information provided (I am guessing 1.35V).

          However, if you prefer to just use Intel XMP or AMD EXPO, then get a newer kit.

    • depending on your PC usage scenarios you are likely to not even notice the difference. for everyday usage, browsing the web etc you won't notice the difference.

  • They drop down fast…..

  • I have like a 64GB DDR5 RAM with 4800mhz paired with my 12th gen cpu. Does the speed actually affect the games i play?

    • +1

      Depends on the games, some games work better with higher memory bandwidth (so higher DDR5 RAM frequency is better), some work better with lower latency. However, you cannot just compare frequency, the CAS latency matters too.

      GPU (inc. VRAM) matters more than RAM.

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