3600mhz CL18 vs 3600Mhz CL14 - how much difference really on Ryzen?

If Zen 3 is 1900mhz tops, then why do we even need 3600mhz ram? Sorry for my ignorance. I’ve been using ddr3 ram for many years
DDR marketing does that to you.
DDR4-3600 is not MHz, its MT for megatransfers. DDR is double data rate, so for every tick there are two transfers. Actual frequency of memory is half - so 1800 MHz.

Zen 2 and 3 perfrom best when memory is synchronous with their internal bus clock, Infinity Fabric (FCLK). Thats what was referred to 1900MHz tops. Meaning there was no point in using memory faster than DDR4-3800. Overclocking memory now mostly consists of tightening timings at that speed.

Zen 3 is rumored to up the FCLK limit to 2000MHz. Meaning higher tier kits up to DDR4-4000 come into discussion
 
DDR marketing does that to you.
DDR4-3600 is not MHz, its MT for megatransfers. DDR is double data rate, so for every tick there are two transfers. Actual frequency of memory is half - so 1800 MHz.

Zen 2 and 3 perfrom best when memory is synchronous with their internal bus clock, Infinity Fabric (FCLK). Thats what was referred to 1900MHz tops. Meaning there was no point in using memory faster than DDR4-3800. Overclocking memory now mostly consists of tightening timings at that speed.

Zen 3 is rumored to up the FCLK limit to 2000MHz. Meaning higher tier kits up to DDR4-4000 come into discussion
Great explanation, thanks.

Checking AMD site on the 5900X page it says
System Memory
System Memory Specification
Up to 3200MHz
Does this therefore mean that upto DDR4-6400 (MR) is supported. I’ve never even seen DDR-6400 RAM
 
No, the 3200 = 1600MHz. However AMD are suggesting that the 5000 series might overclock to 2000MHz = DDR-4000.
 
No, the 3200 = 1600MHz. However AMD are suggesting that the 5000 series might overclock to 2000MHz = DDR-4000.
Oh yeh, by bad. half not double :)

Do we (anyone) know when/if AMD will make an announcement about DDR-4000 support? Possibly on day of release of 5000 series or the day before :rolleyes:
 
Would it be better to get 2 sets of these (CAS14) so buy 2 2 x 8GB sets

Team Group RIPPED Edition 16GB (2x8GB) DDR4 PC4-28800C14 3600MHz Dual Channel Kit - Black/
CAS 14-15-15-35 Timings
https://www.overclockers.co.uk/team...3600mhz-dual-channel-kit-black-my-001-8p.html


Or go with these (CAS16) 2 x 16GB set when they are in stock

Team Group Edition 32GB (2x16GB) DDR4 PC4-28800C16 3600MHz Dual Channel Kit
CAS 16-16-16-38 Timings
https://www.overclockers.co.uk/team...00c16-3600mhz-dual-channel-kit-my-002-8p.html

What in the world is 'RIPPED' ?? :D
 
Would it be better to get 2 sets of these (CAS14) so buy 2 2 x 8GB sets

Team Group RIPPED Edition 16GB (2x8GB) DDR4 PC4-28800C14 3600MHz Dual Channel Kit - Black/
CAS 14-15-15-35 Timings
https://www.overclockers.co.uk/team...3600mhz-dual-channel-kit-black-my-001-8p.html


Or go with these (CAS16) 2 x 16GB set when they are in stock

Team Group Edition 32GB (2x16GB) DDR4 PC4-28800C16 3600MHz Dual Channel Kit
CAS 16-16-16-38 Timings
https://www.overclockers.co.uk/team...00c16-3600mhz-dual-channel-kit-my-002-8p.html

What in the world is 'RIPPED' ?? :D

faster RAM modules vs. use of 4 slots yeah its a tricky one

I believe what causes the limitation is the effect of crosstalk and interreference on the memory bus, therefore if your motherboard is well made with lots of PCB layers faster RAM in theory would be better except in extreme cases such as LN2 OC where the frequencies are abnormally high... assuming its all single rank memory modules which it should be for 8GB
 
Are right. A nice marketing word.
In that case it should have been marketed as 'Artisan Ripped' for another £50 more
4x8 was difficult for me to get working other than 3200 CL14 (XMP). 2x8 OC's to 3600 CL14 with easy - this is on a x570 Taichi. I'd say stick with 2 sticks if possible.
 
Not better but bigger. And worse latency.
If you have any application that could use that much memory, it is a pure win for price/gb. Otherwise a waste.
2x32GB sticks also overclock worse than 2x16GB, mostly because built on slower dies. Most top out at 3733.
But it could be better compared to 4x16GB, because they strain motherboard and memory controller less
 
Not better but bigger. And worse latency.
If you have any application that could use that much memory, it is a pure win for price/gb. Otherwise a waste.
2x32GB sticks also overclock worse than 2x16GB, mostly because built on slower dies. Most top out at 3733.
But it could be better compared to 4x16GB, because they strain motherboard and memory controller less

So I thought (and I could be mistaken here) that the memory controller strain comes from the number of memory ranks in use rather than the slots i.e. 2 slots using double rank memory = 4 slots using single rank, but 2 slots using single rank was best

Therefore 16GB memory modules with single rank would potentially be beneficial but you're already sacrificing some timings on those modules.... So would 4x8GB with room for looser timings end up in the same place, better or worse? I don't know the answer to that but what I would say is Dual Channel memory should run at its advertised speeds and nowhere does it say 2 slots only....
 
Therefore 16GB memory modules with single rank would potentially be beneficial
Note most 16 GB modules are dual rank still.
One exception is Crucial Ballistix Max line, with notably high speed 2x16GB kits that are single rank.
Bottom line, it is easier to find good overclocking 8GB sticks than 16GB. And 32GB sticks won't clock much at all.
 
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