Kingston 2400MHz DDR3 'World's Fastest Memory'

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A pc system would have to be overclocked to make full use of the memory. In addition the extra tall memory heatspreaders can be a royal pain. Sometimes they interfere with the large tower style cpu heatsinks.
 

zerghumper

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That's amazing that it can run at those speeds and still stay at 1.65 volts!

If the price is right then it looks like it's time for an upgrade!
 
9-11-9-27 ? Meh.. I know Kingston can do better than that =)

Id rather spend my cash on lower CAS modules even if they are rated at 2000Mhz. Would be nice to see a benchmark though..

 

lamorpa

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[citation][nom]JohnnyLucky[/nom]A pc system would have to be overclocked to make full use of the memory. In addition the extra tall memory heatspreaders can be a royal pain. Sometimes they interfere with the large tower style cpu heatsinks.[/citation]
And?
 

IzzyCraft

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[citation][nom]OvrClkr[/nom]9-11-9-27 ? Meh.. I know Kingston can do better than that =)Id rather spend my cash on lower CAS modules even if they are rated at 2000Mhz. Would be nice to see a benchmark though..[/citation]
It depends as noticed some lower cas lower speed modules can benefit you just the same as a high cas high speed set up but that's usually when you overclock it to get that extra 100Mhz when the cas issue comes into play. A benchmark of it would clear it up.
 

greliu

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Wouldn't this speed be useless, due to the fact, that many motherboards only allow memory support up to DDR3 1600? Just asking, because I might just be stupid lol.
 

eekitsericc

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[citation][nom]OvrClkr[/nom]9-11-9-27 ? Meh.. I know Kingston can do better than that =)Id rather spend my cash on lower CAS modules even if they are rated at 2000Mhz. Would be nice to see a benchmark though..[/citation]

to be as simple as possible it is just the timing in the ram for several different things. for general purpose the lower the better.

for more in depth check this out ------> http://www.overclock.net/faqs/26706-info-ram-timings-dummies.html
 


Correct but the price also plays a huge roll, if they come out to be overpriced just cause the provide 400 extra Mhz many will just pass and settle for 2000Mhz with low timings. I have tested 1600Mhz vs. 2000Mhz modules and to be honest the difference is very small, it all comes down to how low you can set the timings while attaining 100% stability.
 

coremaster556

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The heat sink does come from a car radiator. I have the same thing on my KIA. Maybe with the suing happy word we have KIA can sue them for something.

 

liquidon

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[citation][nom]trevorvdw[/nom]Looks like Optimus Prime[/citation]

LOL OMFG!!! That one cracked me up really good!!
 

Regulas

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[citation][nom]OvrClkr[/nom]Correct but the price also plays a huge roll, if they come out to be overpriced just cause the provide 400 extra Mhz many will just pass and settle for 2000Mhz with low timings. I have tested 1600Mhz vs. 2000Mhz modules and to be honest the difference is very small, it all comes down to how low you can set the timings while attaining 100% stability.[/citation]
I agree a lower latency at lower MHz would be just as fast?
 

coopchennick

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[citation][nom]zerghumper[/nom]That's amazing that it can run at those speeds and still stay at 1.65 volts!If the price is right then it looks like it's time for an upgrade![/citation]
The price will surely not be right. This is way overkill in my opinion too, they won't do anything for a computer except bump a few points on the benchmarks.
 
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