Buy wisely
Buy wiselyBuy wisely
For RetailersFor developers
  1. Home
Buy wisely

BuyWisely is your one stop price comparison platform, delivering the best deals from over 20,000 online shops. We empower shoppers to make smart, cost-effective choices by offering transparent pricing, price history, and the latest deals across a broad range of products. With BuyWisely, your money goes further.

Popular Shops
JB Hi-Fi
The Good Guys
Harvey Norman
Appliances Online
Bing Lee
Kogan
Amazon
Officeworks
Contact Us
[email protected]
Affiliate Disclosure
Legal Information
Privacy Policy
Logos provided by Logo.dev
© 2026 BuyWisely•Price data powered by pricesAPI.io•Retailers: SellWisely.io
G.SKILL Ripjaws V Series 32GB (2 x 16GB) DDR4 (F4-2400C15D-32GVR)
G.SKILL Ripjaws V Series 32GB (2 x 16GB) DDR4 (F4-2400C15D-32GVR)
G.SKILL Ripjaws V Series 32GB (2 x 16GB) DDR4 (F4-2400C15D-32GVR)
G.SKILL Ripjaws V Series 32GB (2 x 16GB) DDR4 (F4-2400C15D-32GVR)
G.SKILL Ripjaws V Series 32GB (2 x 16GB) DDR4 (F4-2400C15D-32GVR)
G.SKILL Ripjaws V Series 32GB (2 x 16GB) DDR4 (F4-2400C15D-32GVR)
G.SKILL Ripjaws V Series 32GB (2 x 16GB) DDR4 (F4-2400C15D-32GVR)

G.SKILL Ripjaws V Series 32GB (2 x 16GB) DDR4 (F4-2400C15D-32GVR)

(865 reviews)

Ripjaws V is the perfect choice for building a new performance system or for a simple memory upgrade. As the latest member of the classic Ripjaws family, the Ripjaws V series is the newest DDR4 memory designed for maximum compatibility and peak performance with the latest Intel Core processors.

Ripjaws V is the perfect choice for building a new performance system or for a simple memory upgrade. As the latest member of the classic Ripjaws family, the Ripjaws V series is the newest DDR4 memory designed for maximum compatibility and peak performance with the latest Intel Core processors.

$321.16

in 1 offers

The lowest price for G.SKILL Ripjaws V Series 32GB (2 x 16GB) DDR4 (F4-2400C15D-32GVR) right now is $321.16.

Prices last updated 13 Jan 2026.

Capacity:

8 GB
8GB / 4GB
16 GB

G.SKILL Ripjaws V Series 32GB (2 x 16GB) DDR4 (F4-2400C15D-32GVR)

$321.16

(865 reviews)

Ripjaws V is the perfect choice for building a new performance system or for a simple memory upgrade. As the latest member of the classic Ripjaws family, the Ripjaws V series is the newest DDR4 memory designed for maximum compatibility and peak performance with the latest Intel Core processors.

Ripjaws V is the perfect choice for building a new performance system or for a simple memory upgrade. As the latest member of the classic Ripjaws family, the Ripjaws V series is the newest DDR4 memory designed for maximum compatibility and peak performance with the latest Intel Core processors.

16GB / 8GB
16GB / 16GB
32 GB
32GB / 32GB
64GB / 16GB

Price comparison

Price data powered by pricesAPI.io

Last updated at 13/01/2026 04:53:04

Please note: price history and price alerts are not available for some stores, including Amazon.com.au.

Price history

Price history

Please note: price history and price alerts are not available for some stores, including Amazon.com.au.

Reviews

All the sticks I bought worked from the get go.
17 March 2018david m.

originally posted on newegg.com

I built 3 of these for my office. For the typical office / student setting they are fast and efficient with plenty of storage space for the average office setting – word processing, spreadsheets, quickbooks, and the internet. For 80% of users this would be a great PC build. Anyone who is going to do anything with music, video, or hard gaming would probably want something different. All the products below worked well together and I had 0 DOA products. My under $800 build consisted of: O.S. Windows 10 Pro - 64-bit CPU cooler DEEPCOOL Gamer Storm CAPTAIN 120EX WHITE Keyboard/Mouse Logitech MK120 Desktop Keyboard & Mouse Combo BLACK Motherboard 1151 GIGABYTE Z370 HD3P (rev. 1.0) LGA 1151 RAM 8 GB G.SKILL Ripjaws V Series 8GB (2 x 4GB) F4-2800C16D-8GVR Processor Intel ... MoreI built 3 of these for my office. For the typical office / student setting they are fast and efficient with plenty of storage space for the average office setting – word processing, spreadsheets, quickbooks, and the internet. For 80% of users this would be a great PC build. Anyone who is going to do anything with music, video, or hard gaming would probably want something different. All the products below worked well together and I had 0 DOA products. My under $800 build consisted of: O.S. Windows 10 Pro - 64-bit CPU cooler DEEPCOOL Gamer Storm CAPTAIN 120EX WHITE Keyboard/Mouse Logitech MK120 Desktop Keyboard & Mouse Combo BLACK Motherboard 1151 GIGABYTE Z370 HD3P (rev. 1.0) LGA 1151 RAM 8 GB G.SKILL Ripjaws V Series 8GB (2 x 4GB) F4-2800C16D-8GVR Processor Intel Core i3-8100 Coffee Lake Quad-Core 3.6 GHz LGA 1151 M.2 SSD SAMSUNG 960 EVO M.2 250GB NVMe MZ-V6E250BW PSU Seasonic FOCUS series SSR-450FM 450W 80 + Gold Case NZXT S340 Glossy White Steel ATX Mid Tower Case

Does what it's supposed to (Edit: Both sticks dead within 3 years)
4 April 2018Bratcher M.

originally posted on newegg.com

Ram color matches my Asrock Gaming K6 mobo and is fully compatible, running in dual-channel mode at the advertised speed when the XMP profile is enabled. Fits with my Cryorig H7, which stops just short of the RAM slots. Since this seems to be a go-to kit, compatibility should be good, but always check with your mobo manufacturer, especially if it's a Skylake board. Also note that 2133 is stock for most motherboards, and 2400 is an OC'd speed. Switch on the XMP profile in the UEFI/BIOS and you're good to go. Edit: The first stick died within 12, in 2016. At first it would fill up slowly during regular PC use, unable to clear itself, until I'd always have 8 GB in use until a reboot. Then it stopped booting entirely, with my PC throwing memory-related error codes. I ... MoreRam color matches my Asrock Gaming K6 mobo and is fully compatible, running in dual-channel mode at the advertised speed when the XMP profile is enabled. Fits with my Cryorig H7, which stops just short of the RAM slots. Since this seems to be a go-to kit, compatibility should be good, but always check with your mobo manufacturer, especially if it's a Skylake board. Also note that 2133 is stock for most motherboards, and 2400 is an OC'd speed. Switch on the XMP profile in the UEFI/BIOS and you're good to go. Edit: The first stick died within 12, in 2016. At first it would fill up slowly during regular PC use, unable to clear itself, until I'd always have 8 GB in use until a reboot. Then it stopped booting entirely, with my PC throwing memory-related error codes. I replaced it with a newer Ripjaw V (F4-2400C15S-8GVR) which has not given me any problems. As of March 2018, the second of the original two modules has died. Since these modules were made when DDR4 was new, I'm willing to give some benefit of the doubt (and hence purchase another Ripjaw as a replacement), but this is still disappointing.

Good RAM for B450 Chipset System
8 May 2020Jace C.

originally posted on newegg.com

I bought this RAM for a brand new PC build for audio production and gaming. The system runs on a B450 Motherboard with a Ryzen 7 3800X. The end goal was to have enough RAM for my synth plugins to run smoothly even if I have 20 running at the same time, and it works for that. It also provides me enough memory for pretty resource heavy gaming (though I do need to upgrade my GPU, since I only have 4GB of VRAM, but that isn't the fault of these sticks) I haven't tried to overclock this RAM yet, nor do I seriously plan to try as of this writing. The RAM has an aluminum design that is supposed to effectively vent heat away from the RAM but without fans I am not entirely confident in its ability to handle overclocking temps. I would recommend getting this RAM if 2400 RAM ... MoreI bought this RAM for a brand new PC build for audio production and gaming. The system runs on a B450 Motherboard with a Ryzen 7 3800X. The end goal was to have enough RAM for my synth plugins to run smoothly even if I have 20 running at the same time, and it works for that. It also provides me enough memory for pretty resource heavy gaming (though I do need to upgrade my GPU, since I only have 4GB of VRAM, but that isn't the fault of these sticks) I haven't tried to overclock this RAM yet, nor do I seriously plan to try as of this writing. The RAM has an aluminum design that is supposed to effectively vent heat away from the RAM but without fans I am not entirely confident in its ability to handle overclocking temps. I would recommend getting this RAM if 2400 RAM is on the top end of what you will need. If you need 3600, you should definitely go for some faster RAM. I haven't yet tried 3600 in my system but I also couldn't imagine it making all that much of a difference to be completely honest.

Specification

General
Capacity32 GB: 2 x 16 GB
Upgrade TypeGeneric
Memory
TypeDRAM memory kit

Price comparison

Updated 5 months ago
Please note: price history and price alerts are not available for some stores, including Amazon.com.au.

Price history

Price history

Please note: price history and price alerts are not available for some stores, including Amazon.com.au.

Reviews

All the sticks I bought worked from the get go.
17 March 2018

I built 3 of these for my office. For the typical office / student setting they are fast and efficient with plenty of storage space for the average office setting – word processing, spreadsheets, quickbooks, and the internet. For 80% of users this would be a great PC build. Anyone who is going to do anything with music, video, or hard gaming would probably want something different. All the products below worked well together and I had 0 DOA products. My under $800 build consisted of: O.S. Windows 10 Pro - 64-bit CPU cooler DEEPCOOL Gamer Storm CAPTAIN 120EX WHITE Keyboard/Mouse Logitech MK120 Desktop Keyboard & Mouse Combo BLACK Motherboard 1151 GIGABYTE Z370 HD3P (rev. 1.0) LGA 1151 RAM 8 GB G.SKILL Ripjaws V Series 8GB (2 x 4GB) F4-2800C16D-8GVR Processor Intel ... MoreI built 3 of these for my office. For the typical office / student setting they are fast and efficient with plenty of storage space for the average office setting – word processing, spreadsheets, quickbooks, and the internet. For 80% of users this would be a great PC build. Anyone who is going to do anything with music, video, or hard gaming would probably want something different. All the products below worked well together and I had 0 DOA products. My under $800 build consisted of: O.S. Windows 10 Pro - 64-bit CPU cooler DEEPCOOL Gamer Storm CAPTAIN 120EX WHITE Keyboard/Mouse Logitech MK120 Desktop Keyboard & Mouse Combo BLACK Motherboard 1151 GIGABYTE Z370 HD3P (rev. 1.0) LGA 1151 RAM 8 GB G.SKILL Ripjaws V Series 8GB (2 x 4GB) F4-2800C16D-8GVR Processor Intel Core i3-8100 Coffee Lake Quad-Core 3.6 GHz LGA 1151 M.2 SSD SAMSUNG 960 EVO M.2 250GB NVMe MZ-V6E250BW PSU Seasonic FOCUS series SSR-450FM 450W 80 + Gold Case NZXT S340 Glossy White Steel ATX Mid Tower Case

david m. originally posted on newegg.com
Does what it's supposed to (Edit: Both sticks dead within 3 years)
4 April 2018

Ram color matches my Asrock Gaming K6 mobo and is fully compatible, running in dual-channel mode at the advertised speed when the XMP profile is enabled. Fits with my Cryorig H7, which stops just short of the RAM slots. Since this seems to be a go-to kit, compatibility should be good, but always check with your mobo manufacturer, especially if it's a Skylake board. Also note that 2133 is stock for most motherboards, and 2400 is an OC'd speed. Switch on the XMP profile in the UEFI/BIOS and you're good to go. Edit: The first stick died within 12, in 2016. At first it would fill up slowly during regular PC use, unable to clear itself, until I'd always have 8 GB in use until a reboot. Then it stopped booting entirely, with my PC throwing memory-related error codes. I ... MoreRam color matches my Asrock Gaming K6 mobo and is fully compatible, running in dual-channel mode at the advertised speed when the XMP profile is enabled. Fits with my Cryorig H7, which stops just short of the RAM slots. Since this seems to be a go-to kit, compatibility should be good, but always check with your mobo manufacturer, especially if it's a Skylake board. Also note that 2133 is stock for most motherboards, and 2400 is an OC'd speed. Switch on the XMP profile in the UEFI/BIOS and you're good to go. Edit: The first stick died within 12, in 2016. At first it would fill up slowly during regular PC use, unable to clear itself, until I'd always have 8 GB in use until a reboot. Then it stopped booting entirely, with my PC throwing memory-related error codes. I replaced it with a newer Ripjaw V (F4-2400C15S-8GVR) which has not given me any problems. As of March 2018, the second of the original two modules has died. Since these modules were made when DDR4 was new, I'm willing to give some benefit of the doubt (and hence purchase another Ripjaw as a replacement), but this is still disappointing.

Bratcher M. originally posted on newegg.com
Good RAM for B450 Chipset System
8 May 2020

I bought this RAM for a brand new PC build for audio production and gaming. The system runs on a B450 Motherboard with a Ryzen 7 3800X. The end goal was to have enough RAM for my synth plugins to run smoothly even if I have 20 running at the same time, and it works for that. It also provides me enough memory for pretty resource heavy gaming (though I do need to upgrade my GPU, since I only have 4GB of VRAM, but that isn't the fault of these sticks) I haven't tried to overclock this RAM yet, nor do I seriously plan to try as of this writing. The RAM has an aluminum design that is supposed to effectively vent heat away from the RAM but without fans I am not entirely confident in its ability to handle overclocking temps. I would recommend getting this RAM if 2400 RAM ... MoreI bought this RAM for a brand new PC build for audio production and gaming. The system runs on a B450 Motherboard with a Ryzen 7 3800X. The end goal was to have enough RAM for my synth plugins to run smoothly even if I have 20 running at the same time, and it works for that. It also provides me enough memory for pretty resource heavy gaming (though I do need to upgrade my GPU, since I only have 4GB of VRAM, but that isn't the fault of these sticks) I haven't tried to overclock this RAM yet, nor do I seriously plan to try as of this writing. The RAM has an aluminum design that is supposed to effectively vent heat away from the RAM but without fans I am not entirely confident in its ability to handle overclocking temps. I would recommend getting this RAM if 2400 RAM is on the top end of what you will need. If you need 3600, you should definitely go for some faster RAM. I haven't yet tried 3600 in my system but I also couldn't imagine it making all that much of a difference to be completely honest.

Jace C. originally posted on newegg.com
Great performing low cost DDR4
26 February 2016

Shopping for DDR4 ram seemed to require a little more attention then normal. I noticed in many cases of ram running at the same speed some would be 1.2v while others would go all the way up to 1.35v. Even under the same brand you can find 2800mhz at 1.2v, 1.25v, up to 1.35v all with the same timings. My thought process was to find the fastest ram possible at 1.2v. It appeared that once 2800mhz was reached most ram went up to 1.35v so I set my sights on 2800mhz at 1.2v. Because of the lower voltage I suspected I could get the same speeds of the more expensive 3000mhz + while paying less which happened to work out extremely well for me. At the stock 16-16-16-36 timings I was easily able to reach 3200mhz stable at 1.25v which is what I ended up sticking with. With ... MoreShopping for DDR4 ram seemed to require a little more attention then normal. I noticed in many cases of ram running at the same speed some would be 1.2v while others would go all the way up to 1.35v. Even under the same brand you can find 2800mhz at 1.2v, 1.25v, up to 1.35v all with the same timings. My thought process was to find the fastest ram possible at 1.2v. It appeared that once 2800mhz was reached most ram went up to 1.35v so I set my sights on 2800mhz at 1.2v. Because of the lower voltage I suspected I could get the same speeds of the more expensive 3000mhz + while paying less which happened to work out extremely well for me. At the stock 16-16-16-36 timings I was easily able to reach 3200mhz stable at 1.25v which is what I ended up sticking with. With voltage at stock 1.2v and 16-16-16-36 timings running the ram at 3066mhz is about the max I could reach. Tighter timings at that voltage or more speed would cause an occasional game to crash after 30-60min of play. I was able to 3400mhz by raising the voltage to 1.35v but at that speed I had to adjust the timings to 16-17-16-36. I suspect with some more time spent on tweaking I could get it to run 3600mhz stable but after 3200mhz the extra stress on the ram didn't seem worth the marginal performance improvement. At the stock 2800mhz and 1.2v running 15-15-15-35 and even 14-15-14-34 required no effort at all though performance was much better by increasing speed even if it is only by a little. Fortunately they had a small discount for this when I purchased and would definitely recommend for those looking for good performance at a cheap price. I don't know about the 1.25v and 1.3v sticks rated at 2800mhz but these 1.2v sticks have a lot of potential.

Mike H. originally posted on newegg.com
It's G.Skill, Enough Said!
17 December 2015

Been building custom machines, my own and client based, with G.Skill modules exclusively for the last 10 years and have never had a bad module. That's not to say that the consumer can throw caution to the wind and buy just any memory stick to stick in the machine. You need to actually check to see that the particular module(s) are compatible with your motherboard and processor setup. Clients Rig: Red and Black Themed Build Corsair Obsidian Series 450D Black Aluminum / Steel ATX Mid Tower Gaming Case. MSI Gaming Z170A GAMING M7 LGA 1151 Intel Z170 HDMI SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.1 ATX Intel Motherboard. Intel Core i5-6600K 6M Skylake Quad-Core 3.5 GHz LGA 1151 95W BX80662I56600K Desktop Processor Intel HD Graphics 530. IC Diamond 24 Carat Diamond Thermal Compound. Corsair ... MoreBeen building custom machines, my own and client based, with G.Skill modules exclusively for the last 10 years and have never had a bad module. That's not to say that the consumer can throw caution to the wind and buy just any memory stick to stick in the machine. You need to actually check to see that the particular module(s) are compatible with your motherboard and processor setup. Clients Rig: Red and Black Themed Build Corsair Obsidian Series 450D Black Aluminum / Steel ATX Mid Tower Gaming Case. MSI Gaming Z170A GAMING M7 LGA 1151 Intel Z170 HDMI SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.1 ATX Intel Motherboard. Intel Core i5-6600K 6M Skylake Quad-Core 3.5 GHz LGA 1151 95W BX80662I56600K Desktop Processor Intel HD Graphics 530. IC Diamond 24 Carat Diamond Thermal Compound. Corsair Hydro Series H100i GTX Extreme Performance Water / Liquid CPU Cooler. 240mm. G.SKILL Ripjaws V Series 16GB (2 x 8GB) 288-Pin DDR4 SDRAM DDR4 2800 (PC4 22400) Intel Z170 Platform / Intel X99 Platform Desktop Memory Model F4-2800C16D-16GVR. MSI GeForce GTX 960 DirectX 12 GTX 960 GAMING 4G 4GB 128-Bit GDDR5 PCI Express 3.0 x16 HDCP Ready SLI Support ATX Video Card. Ultra X4 1050 Watt Fully Modular Power Supply. x3 COUGAR (120mm) 12CM CFD Red LED Hydraulic (Liquid) Bearing Ultra Silent Fan 1200RPM, 64.4CFM, 16.6dBA. x2 COUGAR (140mm) 14CM CFD Red LED Hydraulic (Liquid) Bearing Ultra Silent Fan 1000RPM, 73.2CFM, 18dBA. Corsair Gaming K70 RGB Mechanical Gaming Keyboard, Aircraft-grade Aluminum, Backlit Multicolor LED - Cherry MX Red. Razer Mamba Tournament Edition Chroma Wired/Wireless 16,000dpi Gaming Mouse RZ01-01370100-R3U1. Windows 7 Home Premium.

James K. originally posted on newegg.com
My experience
14 August 2021

I started with a mismatched CPU and motherboard. The motherboard I wanted needed a CPU with a graphics processor. I bought a i5 10600kf. no graphics processor. That wasn't the only problem. Not understanding how the dust cover fit on the CPU socket, I damaged the CPU socket trying to reinstall it. I still didn't comprehend the problem I had. I first thought it was a memory issue. That's when I bought this memory. Memory didn't work, I bought an i3 10100f CPU. Didn't work. Bought another motherboard, didn't work. Dug my microscope out and discovered I damaged the CPU socket on 1st motherboard. Then I looked at the Gigabyte website and saw the 2 CPU's I bought were wrong for the motherboard. I found an i5 10600k CPU locally. Finally had a working system. It was a ... MoreI started with a mismatched CPU and motherboard. The motherboard I wanted needed a CPU with a graphics processor. I bought a i5 10600kf. no graphics processor. That wasn't the only problem. Not understanding how the dust cover fit on the CPU socket, I damaged the CPU socket trying to reinstall it. I still didn't comprehend the problem I had. I first thought it was a memory issue. That's when I bought this memory. Memory didn't work, I bought an i3 10100f CPU. Didn't work. Bought another motherboard, didn't work. Dug my microscope out and discovered I damaged the CPU socket on 1st motherboard. Then I looked at the Gigabyte website and saw the 2 CPU's I bought were wrong for the motherboard. I found an i5 10600k CPU locally. Finally had a working system. It was a bumpy road, was my fault for not doing enough research but I had fun and it cost less than buying commercially. Note to anyone that builds a system. If you have an AMI bios and get 5 beeps on boot. Check the CPU you bought. If there are monitor ports on the motherboard, CPU needs a graphic processor. 2nd note: CPU dust cover snaps on the outside of the CPU clamp, not under it. This was a LGA 1200 socket, applies to several others too. Just sharing my learning experience. Wasn't Newegg's fault. it was mine. That's what you call experience.

Stephen W. originally posted on newegg.com
Ram is hit or miss if working or not.
19 March 2019

I've ordered at least 40 packages of this in the past few months, but for some reason recently in a month I've gotten 2 packs of 8GB dual-channel that don't work at all. Either stick in the kit. I've had to RMA a few packs so far. Last month I bought a mixture of 16GB dual-channel kits and 8GB dual-channel kits and 2 more packs didn't work. The worst part is testing ram, because I have to build an entirely new system just to make sure it's the ram that is bad and then try older ram I have laying around which works on all the systems I've built. I'm starting to not trust G.SKILL if this happens a 3rd time in a month. Don't like wasting time buying extra ram just to make my customers happy not having to wait on new(rma) parts. If it's a compatibility issue then I ... MoreI've ordered at least 40 packages of this in the past few months, but for some reason recently in a month I've gotten 2 packs of 8GB dual-channel that don't work at all. Either stick in the kit. I've had to RMA a few packs so far. Last month I bought a mixture of 16GB dual-channel kits and 8GB dual-channel kits and 2 more packs didn't work. The worst part is testing ram, because I have to build an entirely new system just to make sure it's the ram that is bad and then try older ram I have laying around which works on all the systems I've built. I'm starting to not trust G.SKILL if this happens a 3rd time in a month. Don't like wasting time buying extra ram just to make my customers happy not having to wait on new(rma) parts. If it's a compatibility issue then I can't find it since I'm building the exact same system over and over and over again with same parts and most of them work.

Anonymous originally posted on newegg.com
Runs great!
11 February 2017

I purpose built this PC to run my BlueIris video surveillance software. I needed a fast processor with multiple cores to decode video streams from multiple IP cameras. It appears so far that the built-in Intel QuickSync decoder is doing a good job decoding the H.264 streams without the aid of a graphics card. I was worried that the Noctua cooler would be too big for the case, but the Fractal specs said it would fit and it does (barely). But the 1st PCI slot is very close so a graphics card probably won't fit there. The Noctua site says this slot is not usable with this cooler. The Noctua cooler is quiet and the Fractal case keeps everything very quiet. - Intel Core i7-7700K Kaby Lake Quad-Core 4.2 GHz LGA 1151 Desktop Processor - ASRock H270M Pro4 LGA 1151 Intel ... MoreI purpose built this PC to run my BlueIris video surveillance software. I needed a fast processor with multiple cores to decode video streams from multiple IP cameras. It appears so far that the built-in Intel QuickSync decoder is doing a good job decoding the H.264 streams without the aid of a graphics card. I was worried that the Noctua cooler would be too big for the case, but the Fractal specs said it would fit and it does (barely). But the 1st PCI slot is very close so a graphics card probably won't fit there. The Noctua site says this slot is not usable with this cooler. The Noctua cooler is quiet and the Fractal case keeps everything very quiet. - Intel Core i7-7700K Kaby Lake Quad-Core 4.2 GHz LGA 1151 Desktop Processor - ASRock H270M Pro4 LGA 1151 Intel H270 HDMI SATA 6Gb/s USB 3.0 Micro ATX Motherboard - G.SKILL Ripjaws V Series 16GB (2 x 8GB) 288-Pin DDR4 SDRAM DDR4 2400 (PC4 19200) - Noctua NH-D14 120mm & 140mm SSO CPU Cooler - CORSAIR RMx Series RM650X 650W 80 PLUS GOLD Power Supply - SAMSUNG 850 EVO 2.5" 250GB SATA III 3-D Vertical Internal Solid State Drive (SSD) - WD Purple 4TB Surveillance Hard Disk Drive - ASUS DRW-24B1ST/BLK/B/AS Black SATA 24X DVD Burner - Bulk - OEM - Logitech K740 Illuminated USB Keyboard - ASUS VS229H-P Black 21.5" 5ms (GTG) HDMI IPS-Panel LED-Backlit Widescreen LCD Monitor - Windows 10 Home - 64-bit - OEM - Fractal Design Define Mini Black Silent MATX Mini Tower Computer Case

Gary G. originally posted on newegg.com
Sent Two Broken Sticks
19 April 2021

I bought these 2x16 sticks because I wanted faster response times when I opened applications and games. Previously I had the 2x8 of this model installed on my rig. I was really excited to crack these bad boys open and install them. Both of them have issues. One wont let my computer boot up, the other gives me BSOD after 2 minutes of booting. Ive had all of the errors imaginable with these. WATCHDOG, colonel, read and write, bad pool caller, etc. everything under the metaphorical sun. Changed BIOS settings, over and underclocked, tried everything. Couldnt get them to work. I really enjoy my 2x8s but theyre just not fast enough. Looks like Ill have to buy another pair eventually. I wont fault the company at all for this because things like this unfortunately just happen.

Anonymous originally posted on newegg.com
Worked in my Asrock AB350M Pro4, Ryzen 5 2400G build
31 May 2018

Was afraid it wouldn't work at listed speed in my Ryzen 5 2400G APU build. Almost gave me a heart attack when the system wouldn't POST after I swapped it in for the 2400mhz place-holder ram. A BIOS reset later got me into the BIOS, set the XMP settings to on, memory speed set itself to 2933mhz and the system booted normally. If this is the first set of memory in your system, you should be fine. Ryzen 5 2400G Asrock AB350M Pro4 BIOS: 4.70 AGESA ver: PinnaclePI-AM4 1.0.0.1a If you get stuttering in games, don't forget to turn off "Core Performance Boost" (turbo boost) in the BIOS. There appears to be a bug where CPU would dip down to 544mhz and GPU would dip to 200mhz causing all sorts of stuttering, only in gaming. To set it: OC Tweaker > OC Mode Change Switch > AMD ... MoreWas afraid it wouldn't work at listed speed in my Ryzen 5 2400G APU build. Almost gave me a heart attack when the system wouldn't POST after I swapped it in for the 2400mhz place-holder ram. A BIOS reset later got me into the BIOS, set the XMP settings to on, memory speed set itself to 2933mhz and the system booted normally. If this is the first set of memory in your system, you should be fine. Ryzen 5 2400G Asrock AB350M Pro4 BIOS: 4.70 AGESA ver: PinnaclePI-AM4 1.0.0.1a If you get stuttering in games, don't forget to turn off "Core Performance Boost" (turbo boost) in the BIOS. There appears to be a bug where CPU would dip down to 544mhz and GPU would dip to 200mhz causing all sorts of stuttering, only in gaming. To set it: OC Tweaker > OC Mode Change Switch > AMD CBS Setting (If you don't set this, the Advanced section won't set) Advanced > AMD CBS > Zen Common Options > Core Performance Boost > Disabled

Nam Y. originally posted on newegg.com

Specification

General
Capacity32 GB: 2 x 16 GB
Upgrade TypeGeneric
Memory
TypeDRAM memory kit

You may also like

G.SKILL Ripjaws V 32GB (2x16GB) DDR4 F4-3200C16D-32GVK
G.SKILL Ripjaws V 32GB (2x16GB) DDR4 F4-3200C16D-32GVK$359.00 - $379.00
7,601
Compare 4 offers
G.SKILL F4-3600C18D-16GVK Ripjaws V 16GB (2x8GB) 3600MHz DDR4
G.SKILL F4-3600C18D-16GVK Ripjaws V 16GB (2x8GB) 3600MHz DDR4$191.80 - $399.00
3,380
Compare 35 offers
G.SKILL Ripjaws V F4-3200C16S-16GVK 16GB (1x16GB) 3200MHz DDR4
G.SKILL Ripjaws V F4-3200C16S-16GVK 16GB (1x16GB) 3200MHz DDR4$209.00 - $1,399.00
7,601
Compare 33 offers
G.SKILL Ripjaws V F4-3200C16D-16GVKB 16GB (2x8GB) 3200MHz DDR4
G.SKILL Ripjaws V F4-3200C16D-16GVKB 16GB (2x8GB) 3200MHz DDR4$192.00 - $284.90
7,601
Compare 35 offers