Does DDR5 6000 Really Matter...?

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DDR5 6000MHz Vs 5200MHz, 4800Mhz and DDR4 3600MHz with an RTX 3080 at 1080p, this is the Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro 6000Mhz kit that does Cl36 timings, so it is quite fast, and with the prices coming down for DDR5, does it make sense to get a kit like this? Today we discuss all the pros and cons.

Chapters
00:00 1080p Gaming benchmarks
02:10 DDR5 Memory.... prices are coming down...! and it's starting to make more sense.
03:12 However getting to 6000MHz.... there is higher voltage.
03:50 The RGB Corsair Vengeance, Profiles and ICUE, Dimensions for Mini-iTX users.
04:45 Lifetiming warranty is good, especially on XMPs like this.
04:58 Conclusion
05:52 Question of the day, how to bring RAM bac k to life?

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#DDR5 #Benchmark #DDR4VsDDR5
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The RGB really helps push those FPS to the max, especially in a case with no window. Keeps the photons in see.

bigjoeangel
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It would be very interesting to see this exact same test repeated on AM5 and with 8 ~ 12 ~ 16 core 7ooo series Ryzens. Yes I know you can't do that just yet ~

Kneedragon
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Personally think we'll see even higher frequency and better timing DDR5 memory shortly before or after the release of Intels 13th gen & AMDs Zen 4 cpus.

mr.wonderful
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Am I the only one who wondered why Bryan had 2 sticks of DDR5 CL36 memory, continually called them CL36 yet his graphs results showed CL40? Typo or did you really test them at CL40?

I run the 6200MT/s CL36 Corsair Dominator Platinum RAM with Buildzoid's secondary timing tweaks for SK hynix memory on ASUS motherboard and saw improvements of about 10% (e.g. a tad over 100, 000MB/s Read in AIDA64).

blaie
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I think the lows is probably the best bit to look at as some small boosts in the lows can be big.

darkphase
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I upgraded my CL40 DDR5 5400mhz to CL32 DDR5 6400mhz. I had interesting results like the mouse - 8Khz razer viper polling at 8000mhz is smoother on the 6400mhz. I tested the change in games after upgrading to 6400mhz & well Seems there might of been a bios issues because I had frame issues for a while. A bios update came out so i upgraded from 1505 to 1720 & that fixed the frame issues.

DamienRamirez
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I think DDR5 makes more sense now for an APU build. That’s unless your motherboard requires it or you need fast RAM for workstation apps that rely on it.

mpalen
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Great video! I pulled the trigger on these when they were released 2-3 weeks ago but on a 32GB 6400 sticks for my asus Z690 mini ITX build and yes I will be holding off until 4000 series cards. As of right now they work fantastic and they perform like a champ

Chiefhao
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Just to let you know, I noticed a huge difference when upgrading my laptop from 16GB DDR5 to 64GB DDR5 (both 4800). For some reason things sped up that I didn't expect to speed up, my gradle builds were about 3 times quicker. When I was playing Fallout 4 an area that took 14 seconds to load up only took about 5 seconds, there was also significant increases in other games load times such as Cyber punk and doom eternal. When I had a DDR4 machine (3600) upgrading from 16GB to 64GB made no noticable difference to any of the above. My current DDR5 macine is a 12th Gen Tetra Deca Core.

warwickwestonwrigful
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Wouldn't games like Factorio be superb for these sorts of tests? I'm not sure how much it would be dependent on clockspeed alone but scaling it with better/faster ram did at least make a noticeable difference with DDR4.

eddsson
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Patriot viper have have 4400 mhz 2x8gb ddr4 kits for about $100 and are relatively easy to get the timings tight in case y’all want to get a good kit at a good price

bobsaget
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I just got a 6400 cl32 32gb 2x16 kit from Corsair... at 135€. I plan on keeping the computer for around 10 years, and I think i made the right choice.

smarquez
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That's an extra 16 FPS with better 1% lows as well. I think that's classified as a decent gain while gaming.

Joerooe
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I feel like we are entering into the realm of diminishing returns. at least with games tested you can only get so much graphics and speed out of it before you start spending money for not very much improvement.

Argonisgema
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Thanks for the Test. In my opinion a good Kit is just the starting Point for RAM oc. This might not push your max fps to much but your minimums will become much better. This will also benefit in higher resolutions. Also arent there faster kits already available?

tibo
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i liked good old gamer's take on this. he also made a video on it like 2 days ago. ddr5 is better depending on the kit and is useful in raytracing for its higher bandwidth if i recall. and depending on the game engine. its worth getting ddr5 eventually

dinobot_maximize
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GDAY MATE…GOOD TO SEE AN AUSSIE DOING TECH REVIEWS..AND BUILDS……SUBSCRIBED

davidhill
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I'm going to be on my highly tuned ddr4 3200 cl14 b die kit for at least another 5 years lol

Malinkadink
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If you want better gaming performance, buy a better graphics card. Trust me. You get much better performance than having high speed RAM. Buy high speed RAM only if you have 3080Ti/3090/3090Ti to get maximum performance. Don't buy high speed RAM if you have 3060, buy 3060Ti instead with slower RAM.

steamstories
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Just watched a similar video on LTT. Their conclusion is, it depends. The game matters, the CPU matters, the GPU matters. Adjusting settings might matter. I think in general when the CPU and GPU both get better so one isn't bottlenecking the other, then portions of a game where you have more data transfers, such as scenes with more assets or is more data intensive to paint a scene are going to need faster memory, and because it's a balancing act between the game, GPU and CPU there isn't a single answer. It will be totally dependent on the system and the games being played on that system, which is why this topic keeps coming up. An answer from 2 years ago is not a good answer today with new hardware and new games.

johndoh