
G.Skill Ripjaw Gaming Series Memory is designed to optimized the high performance DIMMs for reliability in order to get gamers consistently fantastic FPS, while maintaining a solid overclock to prevent a mid-game PC failure from memory errors. G.Skill Ripjaws Gaming Series Memory features the heat spreader design for the ultimate in extreme aesthetics and sleek aluminum cooling.
G.Skill Ripjaw Gaming Series Memory is designed to optimized the high performance DIMMs for reliability in order to get gamers consistently fantastic FPS, while maintaining a solid overclock to prevent a mid-game PC failure from memory errors. G.Skill Ripjaws Gaming Series Memory features the heat spreader design for the ultimate in extreme aesthetics and sleek aluminum cooling.
in 2 offers
The lowest price for G.SKILL 8GB DDR4 2133MHz Single Channel Ripjaws SODIMM right now is $126.50 at desertcart.com.au, compared across 2 retailers.
The all-time low was $62.00 on 10 Oct 2025 — today's price is 104% above the lowest ever. It has been notably cheaper before — worth setting a price alert.
Prices last updated 21 Mar 2026.
G.SKILL 8GB DDR4 2133MHz Single Channel Ripjaws SODIMM
G.Skill Ripjaw Gaming Series Memory is designed to optimized the high performance DIMMs for reliability in order to get gamers consistently fantastic FPS, while maintaining a solid overclock to prevent a mid-game PC failure from memory errors. G.Skill Ripjaws Gaming Series Memory features the heat spreader design for the ultimate in extreme aesthetics and sleek aluminum cooling.
G.Skill Ripjaw Gaming Series Memory is designed to optimized the high performance DIMMs for reliability in order to get gamers consistently fantastic FPS, while maintaining a solid overclock to prevent a mid-game PC failure from memory errors. G.Skill Ripjaws Gaming Series Memory features the heat spreader design for the ultimate in extreme aesthetics and sleek aluminum cooling.
Last updated at 21/03/2026 07:00:24
G.Skill 8 Gb (1 X 8 Gb) Ripjaws Series Ddr4 Pc4 1700 2133 M Hz So Dimm Laptop Memory Module (Cl15) 1.20 V F4 2133 C15 S 8 Grs
Delivery between 27–30 Mar $29
G.Skill Ripjaws 8GB (1x 8GB) DDR4 2133MHz SODIMM Memory
Delivery $11.99
originally posted on neweggbusiness.com
Bought as an upgrade to max out a few years-old laptop and stop Windows 10's constant thrashing to swap file on HDD. Never any issues. Really nice price. The capacity is overkill for most of my tasks, but it's so great to have applications open and re-open so fast with so much cached in the copious unused RAM. I've not done any over-clocking or other tweaks, so I can comment on how far you can actually push them. With this much RAM space, why bother though? The lifetime warranty for the cheapest available part is also a nice peace of mind to have, though I've never needed it as these have been solid since day one.
originally posted on neweggbusiness.com
This was one of the only recommended brands for upgrading my Gigabyte Aero 15x v8 laptop. It came with a single 16gb stick of Kingston RAM, which worked great, but not quite enough for my needs, i.e. video editing, photo editing, coding, gaming, firefox with 100+ tabs open, etc... lol. I read a lot of stories of struggle by others with this laptop who tried to find a second RAM stick that would work with their existing one, some with bad results, and most with mixed results (RAM ran slower, etc). I swapped out the original stick for this pair, turned it on and it immediately booted and fully recognized the new set at full speed and capacity, no problem at all. I am extremely pleased with it! It's very snappy, obviously (dual sticks vs single, plus slightly lower CAS ... MoreThis was one of the only recommended brands for upgrading my Gigabyte Aero 15x v8 laptop. It came with a single 16gb stick of Kingston RAM, which worked great, but not quite enough for my needs, i.e. video editing, photo editing, coding, gaming, firefox with 100+ tabs open, etc... lol. I read a lot of stories of struggle by others with this laptop who tried to find a second RAM stick that would work with their existing one, some with bad results, and most with mixed results (RAM ran slower, etc). I swapped out the original stick for this pair, turned it on and it immediately booted and fully recognized the new set at full speed and capacity, no problem at all. I am extremely pleased with it! It's very snappy, obviously (dual sticks vs single, plus slightly lower CAS latency). I ran memtest for 4-5 hours on the first evening, absolutely no errors. Been using it for 2 weeks now, all is well. I'm glad I went with these!
originally posted on ebay.com
I've used several brands of memory cards and G Skill Ripjaw is right up there with the best of them. Affordable without all the weird colors and plastic molding, simple basic design and they work great. Leave the sticker on as it's a heat sink and helps remove excess heat from the memory chips. A small external auxiliary fan always helps for serious computer nuts, I never understood all the colors and flashing lights with computer components when the actions on the display screen.
| General | |
| Capacity | 8 GB |
| Upgrade Type | Generic |
| Memory | |
| Type | DRAM memory module |
G.Skill 8 Gb (1 X 8 Gb) Ripjaws Series Ddr4 Pc4 1700 2133 M Hz So Dimm Laptop Memory Module (Cl15) 1.20 V F4 2133 C15 S 8 Grs
Delivery between 27–30 Mar $29
G.Skill Ripjaws 8GB (1x 8GB) DDR4 2133MHz SODIMM Memory
Delivery $11.99
Bought as an upgrade to max out a few years-old laptop and stop Windows 10's constant thrashing to swap file on HDD. Never any issues. Really nice price. The capacity is overkill for most of my tasks, but it's so great to have applications open and re-open so fast with so much cached in the copious unused RAM. I've not done any over-clocking or other tweaks, so I can comment on how far you can actually push them. With this much RAM space, why bother though? The lifetime warranty for the cheapest available part is also a nice peace of mind to have, though I've never needed it as these have been solid since day one.
This was one of the only recommended brands for upgrading my Gigabyte Aero 15x v8 laptop. It came with a single 16gb stick of Kingston RAM, which worked great, but not quite enough for my needs, i.e. video editing, photo editing, coding, gaming, firefox with 100+ tabs open, etc... lol. I read a lot of stories of struggle by others with this laptop who tried to find a second RAM stick that would work with their existing one, some with bad results, and most with mixed results (RAM ran slower, etc). I swapped out the original stick for this pair, turned it on and it immediately booted and fully recognized the new set at full speed and capacity, no problem at all. I am extremely pleased with it! It's very snappy, obviously (dual sticks vs single, plus slightly lower CAS ... MoreThis was one of the only recommended brands for upgrading my Gigabyte Aero 15x v8 laptop. It came with a single 16gb stick of Kingston RAM, which worked great, but not quite enough for my needs, i.e. video editing, photo editing, coding, gaming, firefox with 100+ tabs open, etc... lol. I read a lot of stories of struggle by others with this laptop who tried to find a second RAM stick that would work with their existing one, some with bad results, and most with mixed results (RAM ran slower, etc). I swapped out the original stick for this pair, turned it on and it immediately booted and fully recognized the new set at full speed and capacity, no problem at all. I am extremely pleased with it! It's very snappy, obviously (dual sticks vs single, plus slightly lower CAS latency). I ran memtest for 4-5 hours on the first evening, absolutely no errors. Been using it for 2 weeks now, all is well. I'm glad I went with these!
I've used several brands of memory cards and G Skill Ripjaw is right up there with the best of them. Affordable without all the weird colors and plastic molding, simple basic design and they work great. Leave the sticker on as it's a heat sink and helps remove excess heat from the memory chips. A small external auxiliary fan always helps for serious computer nuts, I never understood all the colors and flashing lights with computer components when the actions on the display screen.
Newegg does it again, and G.SKILL Ripjaws is probably the best memory upgrade you can buy for your system. I replaced 2x 8Gb Memory sticks in my Alienware laptop, and it runs phenomenally. I was running a Ubuntu 16.0.4 VM with EVE-NG (a network simulator that I use for studying for my Cisco certifications.) on the laptop, and it was just slow. Once I swapped out the memory for this pair, speed, stability, and the number of virtual routers I can run simultaneously has all increased greatly. For those of you who are gamers: You will get a better virtual experience with lower lag, and better game stability. If my laptop would have supported 64Gb, I'd have gone for that.
Originally I left this review: "Installed these in my Dell Inspiron 5000 2-in-1 (model 5379). The laptop did the classic thing where you power it on with the new ram and it powers right off, and you go through this 2-3 times. But then it booted up to the BIOS, I confirmed the change in system memory, and now the thing flies." And the ram worked great for 6 months, yay. I then got a newer Dell 6-core G5 (G5587-7866BLK-PUS) a few weeks ago, and I pulled the ram from the 5379 and installed it in the new 5587 G5. Works great! I do realize I put 2400MHz ram in a 2666Mhz laptop, therefore not getting the full stock speed I could be, but considering the cost, I'll live with that. Having 32GB for MIDI Orchestration is pretty mandatory and this was a sort-of no-cost way to ... MoreOriginally I left this review: "Installed these in my Dell Inspiron 5000 2-in-1 (model 5379). The laptop did the classic thing where you power it on with the new ram and it powers right off, and you go through this 2-3 times. But then it booted up to the BIOS, I confirmed the change in system memory, and now the thing flies." And the ram worked great for 6 months, yay. I then got a newer Dell 6-core G5 (G5587-7866BLK-PUS) a few weeks ago, and I pulled the ram from the 5379 and installed it in the new 5587 G5. Works great! I do realize I put 2400MHz ram in a 2666Mhz laptop, therefore not getting the full stock speed I could be, but considering the cost, I'll live with that. Having 32GB for MIDI Orchestration is pretty mandatory and this was a sort-of no-cost way to do it. Anyway, those two Dell Laptops have no issues with this RAM.
Installed 32GB in my new ThinkPad E495. Due to recent negative reviews, I ran several hours of memory tests before clearing the laptop for service. No issues at all. I have used G.Skill in 2 of my last 3 builds, also without issues. Here is what I like about G.Skill: When I'm doing a build, I can look on the motherboard's QVL list and find a G.Skill part with the capacity, speed, and timings that I want. Then I get the part number and order it on Newegg. With other manufacturers, there is always something missing - I can't get the capacity I want, or the speed is lower, or the most maddening is when the part number doesn't match anything that is currently available. Kudos to G.Skill for making my life easier!
I would certainly recommend this RAM for anyone looking to upgrade their laptop. The chipset was immediately recognized by my machine, and no need to go into BIOS to make changes. I've not had any issues with them since they were installed. They are decent price IMHO, and I would definitely buy again. Side note - My sticks were shipped without any anti-static protection, but have worked flawlessly since installed. That's the only "gripe" I have, but I wouldn't let that you discourage you from buying this RAM. Have a great day and stay safe friends!
I regularly buy G.Skill ram (the better rated stuff at least for my business and we build systems every day of the week) and I've bought multiple of this and other G.SKILL DDR4 laptop ram chips and as of late they seem to all be utter garbage (the 2 x 8GB equivalent of this). I previously thought there was just a compatibility issue and let it go and returned the ram. Today I tested this 2 x 16GB kit (F4-2400C16D-32GRS) in 4 different laptops of different generations and it hasn't worked in any of them either. I also have multiple kits. So now I'm not so sure. My plan is to stay away from G.Skill for a while. I will also point out that when I installed equivalent Corsair Vengeance ram I had no problems in any of the systems.
I would recommend these RAM cards when in search of the basic need of increasing your notebook's overall available RAM. This was a purchase of necessity, not exactly preference. *Be sure to know what RAM type your notebook needs! (DDR wise) I regularly play demanding video games on my notebook which originally came with 12gb of RAM. I would constantly hit this limit (obviously). Vast improvement with 32GB, "breathing room" if you will. I do not know enough about ram to effectively review how these cards compete with other comparable RAM cards and brands. Your in-dept review on card stats & performance is hopefully contained within another review. GLHF!
Now, about WHY such RAM is needed. This situation causes people to have to get more RAM like this product. This product helps the situation... So, not unique to this product, boosting any Windows 10 machine above 4GB, as I did with these, makes a huge performance difference... despite M$ claiming only 4GB is required. Hogwash. At 4GB, two of my laptops perform at an unbearable snail's pace. It doesn't help that Windows 10 tries to perform SO MANY background tasks, esp. at startup. And Google Chrome, Microsoft Edge, Google Drive Backup and Sync, and Dropbox apps ALL also contribute to this terrible problem, trying to so grab so many resources (CPU time, system interrupts, RAM/memory, swapping RAM to storage... to HDD or a SSD). It all results in attempts to perform ... MoreNow, about WHY such RAM is needed. This situation causes people to have to get more RAM like this product. This product helps the situation... So, not unique to this product, boosting any Windows 10 machine above 4GB, as I did with these, makes a huge performance difference... despite M$ claiming only 4GB is required. Hogwash. At 4GB, two of my laptops perform at an unbearable snail's pace. It doesn't help that Windows 10 tries to perform SO MANY background tasks, esp. at startup. And Google Chrome, Microsoft Edge, Google Drive Backup and Sync, and Dropbox apps ALL also contribute to this terrible problem, trying to so grab so many resources (CPU time, system interrupts, RAM/memory, swapping RAM to storage... to HDD or a SSD). It all results in attempts to perform lots of work just when you are trying to get a PC started an responsive to user inputs and attempts to launch and use one or two simple apps. Have you ever clocked how long all this takes? And all that system indexing, health status polling and reporting, system update checks, anti-malware scanning, data compression and swapping RAM to disk. Scanning caches and user profiles. I have never had any version of Linux bog down like Windows does, especially with a 4GB device. We should not have to use such powerfully equipped computers just to get a smoothly running Windows 10 experience, especially on startup. And M$ doesn't help the average user understand everything that is going on to slow performance. OK, some people know about the simply specified and somewhat well known "startup apps." Users even have their own startup folder to intentionally start desired programs at startup or logon. Fewer people realize how many so called "services" are running for Windows and apps, like the ones mentioned above. And how many of them are simply not necessary. And I'll bet very very few people realize that beyond those two sources for running tasks on Windows, there is YET A THIRD source that launches and runs tasks, possibly despite your efforts to stop such things from running (by disabling "startup apps" and various unnecessary "services"). Windows 10, like other operating systems, has a TASK SCHEDULER that launches and runs many tasks based on many criteria and triggers. Amazingly, if you struggle to disable Google updates, Dropbox updates, Chrome updates, or Edge updates in startup and also in services, if you look at Task Manager to see what's running, you'll be dumbfounded to see tasks for these things somehow mysteriously STILL running anyway. They get launched by the Task Scheduler. All that is to say that you can do several things to help system performance: (1) add more RAM, and (2) disable startup of many many unnecessary tasks. But you have to know what you are disabling and where to disable them. Funny, even a Linux distro running from a USB thumb-drive has minimal performance impact, despite running many tasks with its own task scheduling feature. And it does it with much less RAM and none (or very very little) memory swapping to disk. If you have a HDD, you notice an obviously difference in HDD activity. Windows never stops its continuous and extensive reading and writing to storage. Linux makes very very little such reading and writing to disk storage.
| General | |
| Capacity | 8 GB |
| Upgrade Type | Generic |
| Memory | |
| Type | DRAM memory module |