Question Ram for Ryzen 7 7800x3d

Jul 21, 2025
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5
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Hello guys I was wondering what would be a sweet spot for a r7 7800x3d in terms of rams I was thinking to go with those

Memorie Lexar ARES RGB 32GB DDR5 6000MHz CL30 Dual Channel Kit

But also what are some CL TIMINGS and mhz would go amazing with that cpu,

I don't know how to explain but someone told me that lower timings cl doesn't always mean good for your needs or cpu something like that

I'm really curious on what you guys have to teach me, I'm all eyes 👀 I'm 15 and I really like electronics and I only got into it

Thanks in advance
 
I was wondering what would be a sweet spot for a Ryzen 7 7800X3D in terms of RAM.
DDR5-6000MHz, dual channel, tight latencied ram kit with AMD's E.X.P.O advertised on the packaging.

I don't know how to explain but someone told me that lower CL timings doesn't always mean good for your needs or cpu, something like that
Perhaps what they were trying to say is that lower CL timings and higher freqeuncies will depend on what you'll be taxing the system with. If gaming and productivity, yes. If just day to day tasks, then no. An argument can be made about buying a Ryzen 7 7800X3D for day to day tasks...as you can get away with a lower pedigree processor.

You won't find a latency lower than 30 on todays ram kits;
https://pcpartpicker.com/products/memory/#b=ddr5&Z=32768002&S=6000,8400&sort=cas&page=1
and if you do, they'll cost you a pretty penny. This brings you to the topic of whether you're getting what you pay for when you look at very tight timing ram kits.
 
I was wondering what would be a sweet spot for a Ryzen 7 7800X3D in terms of RAM.
DDR5-6000MHz, dual channel, tight latencied ram kit with AMD's E.X.P.O advertised on the packaging.

I don't know how to explain but someone told me that lower timings cl doesn't always mean good for your needs or cpu something like that
Perhaps what they were trying to say is that lower CL timings and higher freqeuncies will depend on what you'll be taxing the system with. If gaming and productivity, yes. If just day to day tasks, then no. An argument can be made about buying a Ryzen 7 7800X3D for day to day tasks...as you can get away with a lower pedigree processor.

You won't find a latency lower than 30 on todays ram kits;
https://pcpartpicker.com/products/memory/#b=ddr5&Z=32768002&S=6000,8400&sort=cas&page=1
and if you do, they'll cost you a pretty penny. This brings you to the topic of whether you're getting what you pay for when you look at very tight timing ram kits.
I don't understand wjy would someone will buy cl28 ram 1. Lots of money has nothing to do w em 2. Makes tons of money from that pc