G.Skill Trident Z RGB F4-3200C16D-64GTZR Memory Module 64 GB DDR4 3200 MHz
The Trident Z RGB DDR4 memory kit features a fully exposed light bar with vibrant RGB LEDs, combined with the Trident Z heat spreader design made from the highest quality components. It offers the most vivid RGB lighting with uncompromising performance. The uncovered light bar is designed for full RGB visual satisfaction, with the standard lighting displaying a full-spectrum, fluid rainbow wave pattern. Downloadable software allows for advanced effects and color adjustments on the memory modules, enabling you to customize the color to match your build and rethink the possibilities with RGB. Trident Z RGB retains the iconic design element of the traditional Trident Z series, featuring luxurious hairline aluminum heat spreaders and an aggressive fin design for highly efficient heat dissipation. The top of the heat spreader is exclusively designed for mounting a wider light diffuser to achieve more extravagant lighting effects. This memory combines performance and beauty, making it ideal for building a stylish, modern PC. Each memory kit contains specially protected ICs selected through an unprecedented selection process, as well as a specially designed ten-layer PCB for maximum signal stability. Each kit is rigorously tested for reliability, compatibility, and performance across a wide range of motherboards. Create a unique PC with the Trident Z RGB memory kit, where you can choose the colors you want and ensure that these modules look modern and up-to-date in any build.
The Trident Z RGB DDR4 memory kit features a fully exposed light bar with vibrant RGB LEDs, combined with the Trident Z heat spreader design made from the highest quality components. It offers the most vivid RGB lighting with uncompromising performance. The uncovered light bar is designed for full RGB visual satisfaction, with the standard lighting displaying a full-spectrum, fluid rainbow wave pattern. Downloadable software allows for advanced effects and color adjustments on the memory modules, enabling you to customize the color to match your build and rethink the possibilities with RGB. Trident Z RGB retains the iconic design element of the traditional Trident Z series, featuring luxurious hairline aluminum heat spreaders and an aggressive fin design for highly efficient heat dissipation. The top of the heat spreader is exclusively designed for mounting a wider light diffuser to achieve more extravagant lighting effects. This memory combines performance and beauty, making it ideal for building a stylish, modern PC. Each memory kit contains specially protected ICs selected through an unprecedented selection process, as well as a specially designed ten-layer PCB for maximum signal stability. Each kit is rigorously tested for reliability, compatibility, and performance across a wide range of motherboards. Create a unique PC with the Trident Z RGB memory kit, where you can choose the colors you want and ensure that these modules look modern and up-to-date in any build.
The Trident Z RGB DDR4 memory kit features a fully exposed light bar with vibrant RGB LEDs, combined with the Trident Z heat spreader design made from the highest quality components. It offers the most vivid RGB lighting with uncompromising performance. The uncovered light bar is designed for full RGB visual satisfaction, with the standard lighting displaying a full-spectrum, fluid rainbow wave pattern. Downloadable software allows for advanced effects and color adjustments on the memory modules, enabling you to customize the color to match your build and rethink the possibilities with RGB. Trident Z RGB retains the iconic design element of the traditional Trident Z series, featuring luxurious hairline aluminum heat spreaders and an aggressive fin design for highly efficient heat dissipation. The top of the heat spreader is exclusively designed for mounting a wider light diffuser to achieve more extravagant lighting effects. This memory combines performance and beauty, making it ideal for building a stylish, modern PC. Each memory kit contains specially protected ICs selected through an unprecedented selection process, as well as a specially designed ten-layer PCB for maximum signal stability. Each kit is rigorously tested for reliability, compatibility, and performance across a wide range of motherboards. Create a unique PC with the Trident Z RGB memory kit, where you can choose the colors you want and ensure that these modules look modern and up-to-date in any build.
The Trident Z RGB DDR4 memory kit features a fully exposed light bar with vibrant RGB LEDs, combined with the Trident Z heat spreader design made from the highest quality components. It offers the most vivid RGB lighting with uncompromising performance. The uncovered light bar is designed for full RGB visual satisfaction, with the standard lighting displaying a full-spectrum, fluid rainbow wave pattern. Downloadable software allows for advanced effects and color adjustments on the memory modules, enabling you to customize the color to match your build and rethink the possibilities with RGB. Trident Z RGB retains the iconic design element of the traditional Trident Z series, featuring luxurious hairline aluminum heat spreaders and an aggressive fin design for highly efficient heat dissipation. The top of the heat spreader is exclusively designed for mounting a wider light diffuser to achieve more extravagant lighting effects. This memory combines performance and beauty, making it ideal for building a stylish, modern PC. Each memory kit contains specially protected ICs selected through an unprecedented selection process, as well as a specially designed ten-layer PCB for maximum signal stability. Each kit is rigorously tested for reliability, compatibility, and performance across a wide range of motherboards. Create a unique PC with the Trident Z RGB memory kit, where you can choose the colors you want and ensure that these modules look modern and up-to-date in any build.
in 3 offers
The lowest price for G.Skill Trident Z RGB F4-3200C16D-64GTZR Memory Module 64 GB DDR4 3200 MHz right now is $596.95 at Mwave Australia, compared across 3 retailers.
The all-time low was $297.00 on 31 Dec 2025 — today's price is 101% above the lowest ever. It has been notably cheaper before — worth setting a price alert.
Prices last updated 28 June 2026.
Last updated at 28/06/2026 06:17:44
G.Skill Trident Z RGB 64GB (2x 32GB) DDR4 3200MHz Memory
Free delivery between 1–8 July
G.Skill Trident Z RGB F4-3200C16D-64GTZR memory module 64 GB 2 x 32 GB DDR4 3200 MHz, Trident Z RGB DDR4-3200MHz, CL16, 1.35V, 64GB (2x32GB)
G.Skill Trident Z RGB 64GB (2x32GB) DDR4-3200MHz CL16-18-18-38 1.35V SDRAM Memory Module F4-3200C16D-64GTZR
Delivery between 1–7 July $20
originally posted on microcenter.com
When I first built my PC in August of 2020, I bought an open-box Ram kit, G.Skill 16GB. Since then, I was able to return the open-box kit because I suspected it was defective--which is probably why it was open-box--and exchange it for a Crucial 16GB Ram kit. I ended up returning that kit the same day because Aura Creator didn't bring out the best effects of the RGB. I exchanged it for a Corsair Vengeance 16GB kit which was not stable at all and reset to 2133Mhz by itself every other day and caused my games to crash at least once a day for about 3 days straight. I then exchanged that kit for a G.Skill 32GB kit which was fine except that when I was having frame drops I decided to give Crucial another chance but with 32GB this time around. For some reason, Aura Creator ... MoreWhen I first built my PC in August of 2020, I bought an open-box Ram kit, G.Skill 16GB. Since then, I was able to return the open-box kit because I suspected it was defective--which is probably why it was open-box--and exchange it for a Crucial 16GB Ram kit. I ended up returning that kit the same day because Aura Creator didn't bring out the best effects of the RGB. I exchanged it for a Corsair Vengeance 16GB kit which was not stable at all and reset to 2133Mhz by itself every other day and caused my games to crash at least once a day for about 3 days straight. I then exchanged that kit for a G.Skill 32GB kit which was fine except that when I was having frame drops I decided to give Crucial another chance but with 32GB this time around. For some reason, Aura Creator worked fine with this kit. Go figure.I was almost happy until I noticed that I was utilizing quite a bit of RAM while gaming since I tend to have Chrome tabs open for music and other sites I use to keep track of stats so I decided to upgrade to 64GB.Unfortunately Micro Center doesn't have a huge selection of 64GB RAM kits, so it was either Crucial which was a quad channel kit that my motherboard can't take advantage of so I opted for this 2-stick RAM kit instead. Let me tell you, I had forgotten how good the RGB is, especially compared to the Crucial and Corsair RAM kits. This kit is top-tier. Compared to the Crucial RGB, it doesn't display green, blue, or red when strobing from Aqua to White. The brightness and color accuracy is so much better than the Corsair kit that I had. As far as performance, even though this is a CL18 kit instead of CL16, the PC is more responsive!That's not to say that I didn't have any issues when I put this kit in my PC. To begin with, my PC didn't post and I received several different codes on my MOBO which the manual had no explanation for and online I found so many different (and wrong) theories, fixes, and additional issues. What ended up working for me was trying only 1 of the RAM sticks from one DIMM slot to the next until the PC posted. Once I got into BIOS, I changed DOCP back to Auto and exited with saved changes. Then I was successful in booting up and when I checked Task Manager, it showed that I was at 2633Mhz so I shut down, installed the 2nd RAM stick and turned on the PC. I checked Task Manager again and it showed both RAM sticks. I shut down and jumped into BIOS again to enable DOCP and restart. Once Windows booted up, I was in business. I wonder if by leaving the previous profile for the Crucial RAM I had caused the PC to not be able to boot when I first installed this RAM. That being said, I highly recommend you reset your profile to auto before you take out your old ram since it might be the reason I had a bit of a struggle.
originally posted on neweggbusiness.com
This RAM is top tier, its latency makes it better than any DDR5 out yet. The problem is compatibility. If you only have to drop it to 4200 MHZ to work, that's very very nearly the same and probably worth it. If you are too inexperienced or don't want the trouble of having to modify the XMP and overclock yourself, do yourself a favor and use G.Skill's configurator on their website to check the Qualified Vendor List (QVL) to check compatibility of your specific motherboard. https://www.gskill.com/configurator Last recommendation, if you can't get full compatibility out of this, you most likely can of a lower MHZ G.Skill ram of almost the same latency, meaning probably better than this if you can't get advertised specs. ( G.Skill 2x16 GB 3600 mhz 14-14-14-34 CAS timing ... MoreThis RAM is top tier, its latency makes it better than any DDR5 out yet. The problem is compatibility. If you only have to drop it to 4200 MHZ to work, that's very very nearly the same and probably worth it. If you are too inexperienced or don't want the trouble of having to modify the XMP and overclock yourself, do yourself a favor and use G.Skill's configurator on their website to check the Qualified Vendor List (QVL) to check compatibility of your specific motherboard. https://www.gskill.com/configurator Last recommendation, if you can't get full compatibility out of this, you most likely can of a lower MHZ G.Skill ram of almost the same latency, meaning probably better than this if you can't get advertised specs. ( G.Skill 2x16 GB 3600 mhz 14-14-14-34 CAS timing RAM )
originally posted on neweggbusiness.com
---This kit is excellent. I was able to clock this kit up to 4133 18-18-18-38 @ 1.52V on an AsRock Z390 Phantom gaming ITX/AC motherboard with a 9900k, which is absolutely fantastic for a dual rank memory configuration. I didn't like the required voltage to hit that frequency, so I settled for 3600 14-14-14-30 @ 1.42V with extremely tightened secondary and tertiary timings which gives me incredible performance and is very impressive as well. From my experience, it can be difficult to get single rank kits into that performance bracket, never mind that this kit can do it at such (relatively) low voltage. Keep in mind, as with all things overclocking, there is going to be variance that depends on a number of factors, including IMC, motherboard, and the memory ICs ... More---This kit is excellent. I was able to clock this kit up to 4133 18-18-18-38 @ 1.52V on an AsRock Z390 Phantom gaming ITX/AC motherboard with a 9900k, which is absolutely fantastic for a dual rank memory configuration. I didn't like the required voltage to hit that frequency, so I settled for 3600 14-14-14-30 @ 1.42V with extremely tightened secondary and tertiary timings which gives me incredible performance and is very impressive as well. From my experience, it can be difficult to get single rank kits into that performance bracket, never mind that this kit can do it at such (relatively) low voltage. Keep in mind, as with all things overclocking, there is going to be variance that depends on a number of factors, including IMC, motherboard, and the memory ICs themselves, and to a lesser extent, the PCB design of the kit as well. I think it is very possible that this kit is one of the best bins available in this configuration. Something to keep in mind, is that I would not recommend this kit to anyone that doesn't plan on manually tuning/overclocking. This kit is excellent for such endeavors, but if you're looking to get a kit that you can just set XMP on and let it run, much, much better value can be had. Realistically, XMP settings on memory kits are so loose to ensure compatibility, that they all might as well be the same, even though Samsung B Die ICs can run much, much tighter timings than just about everything else with little issue. If all you're after is XMP compatibility, then might as well get something less expensive with comparable timings, like a CJR Kit for nearly half the price. As for overclocking, I'm fairly well convinced you can't do any better.
| General | |
| Capacity | 64 GB: 2 x 32 GB |
| Upgrade Type | Generic |
| Memory | |
| Type | DRAM memory kit |
G.Skill Trident Z RGB 64GB (2x 32GB) DDR4 3200MHz Memory
Free delivery between 1–8 July
G.Skill Trident Z RGB F4-3200C16D-64GTZR memory module 64 GB 2 x 32 GB DDR4 3200 MHz, Trident Z RGB DDR4-3200MHz, CL16, 1.35V, 64GB (2x32GB)
G.Skill Trident Z RGB 64GB (2x32GB) DDR4-3200MHz CL16-18-18-38 1.35V SDRAM Memory Module F4-3200C16D-64GTZR
Delivery between 1–7 July $20
When I first built my PC in August of 2020, I bought an open-box Ram kit, G.Skill 16GB. Since then, I was able to return the open-box kit because I suspected it was defective--which is probably why it was open-box--and exchange it for a Crucial 16GB Ram kit. I ended up returning that kit the same day because Aura Creator didn't bring out the best effects of the RGB. I exchanged it for a Corsair Vengeance 16GB kit which was not stable at all and reset to 2133Mhz by itself every other day and caused my games to crash at least once a day for about 3 days straight. I then exchanged that kit for a G.Skill 32GB kit which was fine except that when I was having frame drops I decided to give Crucial another chance but with 32GB this time around. For some reason, Aura Creator ... MoreWhen I first built my PC in August of 2020, I bought an open-box Ram kit, G.Skill 16GB. Since then, I was able to return the open-box kit because I suspected it was defective--which is probably why it was open-box--and exchange it for a Crucial 16GB Ram kit. I ended up returning that kit the same day because Aura Creator didn't bring out the best effects of the RGB. I exchanged it for a Corsair Vengeance 16GB kit which was not stable at all and reset to 2133Mhz by itself every other day and caused my games to crash at least once a day for about 3 days straight. I then exchanged that kit for a G.Skill 32GB kit which was fine except that when I was having frame drops I decided to give Crucial another chance but with 32GB this time around. For some reason, Aura Creator worked fine with this kit. Go figure.I was almost happy until I noticed that I was utilizing quite a bit of RAM while gaming since I tend to have Chrome tabs open for music and other sites I use to keep track of stats so I decided to upgrade to 64GB.Unfortunately Micro Center doesn't have a huge selection of 64GB RAM kits, so it was either Crucial which was a quad channel kit that my motherboard can't take advantage of so I opted for this 2-stick RAM kit instead. Let me tell you, I had forgotten how good the RGB is, especially compared to the Crucial and Corsair RAM kits. This kit is top-tier. Compared to the Crucial RGB, it doesn't display green, blue, or red when strobing from Aqua to White. The brightness and color accuracy is so much better than the Corsair kit that I had. As far as performance, even though this is a CL18 kit instead of CL16, the PC is more responsive!That's not to say that I didn't have any issues when I put this kit in my PC. To begin with, my PC didn't post and I received several different codes on my MOBO which the manual had no explanation for and online I found so many different (and wrong) theories, fixes, and additional issues. What ended up working for me was trying only 1 of the RAM sticks from one DIMM slot to the next until the PC posted. Once I got into BIOS, I changed DOCP back to Auto and exited with saved changes. Then I was successful in booting up and when I checked Task Manager, it showed that I was at 2633Mhz so I shut down, installed the 2nd RAM stick and turned on the PC. I checked Task Manager again and it showed both RAM sticks. I shut down and jumped into BIOS again to enable DOCP and restart. Once Windows booted up, I was in business. I wonder if by leaving the previous profile for the Crucial RAM I had caused the PC to not be able to boot when I first installed this RAM. That being said, I highly recommend you reset your profile to auto before you take out your old ram since it might be the reason I had a bit of a struggle.
This RAM is top tier, its latency makes it better than any DDR5 out yet. The problem is compatibility. If you only have to drop it to 4200 MHZ to work, that's very very nearly the same and probably worth it. If you are too inexperienced or don't want the trouble of having to modify the XMP and overclock yourself, do yourself a favor and use G.Skill's configurator on their website to check the Qualified Vendor List (QVL) to check compatibility of your specific motherboard. https://www.gskill.com/configurator Last recommendation, if you can't get full compatibility out of this, you most likely can of a lower MHZ G.Skill ram of almost the same latency, meaning probably better than this if you can't get advertised specs. ( G.Skill 2x16 GB 3600 mhz 14-14-14-34 CAS timing ... MoreThis RAM is top tier, its latency makes it better than any DDR5 out yet. The problem is compatibility. If you only have to drop it to 4200 MHZ to work, that's very very nearly the same and probably worth it. If you are too inexperienced or don't want the trouble of having to modify the XMP and overclock yourself, do yourself a favor and use G.Skill's configurator on their website to check the Qualified Vendor List (QVL) to check compatibility of your specific motherboard. https://www.gskill.com/configurator Last recommendation, if you can't get full compatibility out of this, you most likely can of a lower MHZ G.Skill ram of almost the same latency, meaning probably better than this if you can't get advertised specs. ( G.Skill 2x16 GB 3600 mhz 14-14-14-34 CAS timing RAM )
---This kit is excellent. I was able to clock this kit up to 4133 18-18-18-38 @ 1.52V on an AsRock Z390 Phantom gaming ITX/AC motherboard with a 9900k, which is absolutely fantastic for a dual rank memory configuration. I didn't like the required voltage to hit that frequency, so I settled for 3600 14-14-14-30 @ 1.42V with extremely tightened secondary and tertiary timings which gives me incredible performance and is very impressive as well. From my experience, it can be difficult to get single rank kits into that performance bracket, never mind that this kit can do it at such (relatively) low voltage. Keep in mind, as with all things overclocking, there is going to be variance that depends on a number of factors, including IMC, motherboard, and the memory ICs ... More---This kit is excellent. I was able to clock this kit up to 4133 18-18-18-38 @ 1.52V on an AsRock Z390 Phantom gaming ITX/AC motherboard with a 9900k, which is absolutely fantastic for a dual rank memory configuration. I didn't like the required voltage to hit that frequency, so I settled for 3600 14-14-14-30 @ 1.42V with extremely tightened secondary and tertiary timings which gives me incredible performance and is very impressive as well. From my experience, it can be difficult to get single rank kits into that performance bracket, never mind that this kit can do it at such (relatively) low voltage. Keep in mind, as with all things overclocking, there is going to be variance that depends on a number of factors, including IMC, motherboard, and the memory ICs themselves, and to a lesser extent, the PCB design of the kit as well. I think it is very possible that this kit is one of the best bins available in this configuration. Something to keep in mind, is that I would not recommend this kit to anyone that doesn't plan on manually tuning/overclocking. This kit is excellent for such endeavors, but if you're looking to get a kit that you can just set XMP on and let it run, much, much better value can be had. Realistically, XMP settings on memory kits are so loose to ensure compatibility, that they all might as well be the same, even though Samsung B Die ICs can run much, much tighter timings than just about everything else with little issue. If all you're after is XMP compatibility, then might as well get something less expensive with comparable timings, like a CJR Kit for nearly half the price. As for overclocking, I'm fairly well convinced you can't do any better.
I was very lucky to have found both 32 GB kits I bought as Open box returns at my local Micro Center at a good price. I chose the XMP profile and it was plug and play. CPU-Z showed all for sticks are running at DDR4-4000 full speed. I did increase the CPU infinity fabric so I can have the recommended 1:1 ratio with the RAM, as recommended for Ryzen and again, no issues. After that I stressed the system using Aida64 for 4 hours and no problem. And lastly I checked the memory overnight for 10 hours using Passmark Memtest86 pro. It passed with flying colors. This particular model is just rock solid. Go and just get it.
Everything seemed fine for a few days of light use, but then I had a nice 24hr session and started noticing hiccups. My PC would randomly restart while gaming, and I also got a few BSODs while gaming/downloading games. My first thought went to the RAM after reading some of the various stop codes given from the BSODs, including 0x50 PAGE_FAULT_IN_NONPAGED_AREA, which is linked to defective RAM or drivers. I ruled out the drivers because I did a full PC reset and deleted everything out of frustration. Lol I absolutely refuse to turn off XMP, because I want what I paid for (3600MHz CL16). Instead of testing with XMP off, I swapped with a kit of 2400MHz Corsair Vengeance from my other PC. I then tested by downloading a lot of games over about 3-4 hours (which had ... MoreEverything seemed fine for a few days of light use, but then I had a nice 24hr session and started noticing hiccups. My PC would randomly restart while gaming, and I also got a few BSODs while gaming/downloading games. My first thought went to the RAM after reading some of the various stop codes given from the BSODs, including 0x50 PAGE_FAULT_IN_NONPAGED_AREA, which is linked to defective RAM or drivers. I ruled out the drivers because I did a full PC reset and deleted everything out of frustration. Lol I absolutely refuse to turn off XMP, because I want what I paid for (3600MHz CL16). Instead of testing with XMP off, I swapped with a kit of 2400MHz Corsair Vengeance from my other PC. I then tested by downloading a lot of games over about 3-4 hours (which had previously given me at least 2 BSODs in a short amount of time)... no BSOD or restarts with the Corsair. I will be returning these for a replacement, or possibly an "upgrade" to 4x8 TridentZ Neo 3600 (still SK Hynix) since Ryzen also seems to benefit from 4 DIMMs. Disappointed overall. I expected a little more stability, but can't expect much from an SK Hynix kit. The Samsung B-Die (model F4-3600C16D-32GTZR (no "C" at the end)) price is just not worth it for my use case, even though it is far more stable. I will just be enabling XMP and moving on. I've had enough headaches. My system specs: - 5800X (stock) - 3070 Gigabyte Gaming OC (stock) - Gigabyte X570 AORUS ELITE mobo - V750 CM SFX PSU - 1TB WD SN550 SSD - EK 280mm AIO - Lian Li O11-D Mini - 6 x eZDIY Moonlight fans - RAM = NOW PENDING ~
I built these into a system with the following components: AMD Ryzen 5 2400G MSI B450I Gaming Plus AC Samsung 970 Evo M.2/Samsung 860 Evo 2.5" Windows 10 64-bit Home G.Skill is typically my go-to for RAM because their compatibility and quality are stellar. In this case, however, I got bit. I figured with "for AMD" right in the RAM description I couldn't lose, and G.Skill's web page does in fact list the MSI mobo I was using in the QVL for these particular sticks, but AMD doesn't list this RAM on THEIR QVL and really, I should've gone by that. I got the computer up and running and before long I was on the express route to BlueScreenville. I updated all drivers (and most recent BIOS), no luck. Re-loaded Windows 10 and started over, and loaded most recent drivers first ... MoreI built these into a system with the following components: AMD Ryzen 5 2400G MSI B450I Gaming Plus AC Samsung 970 Evo M.2/Samsung 860 Evo 2.5" Windows 10 64-bit Home G.Skill is typically my go-to for RAM because their compatibility and quality are stellar. In this case, however, I got bit. I figured with "for AMD" right in the RAM description I couldn't lose, and G.Skill's web page does in fact list the MSI mobo I was using in the QVL for these particular sticks, but AMD doesn't list this RAM on THEIR QVL and really, I should've gone by that. I got the computer up and running and before long I was on the express route to BlueScreenville. I updated all drivers (and most recent BIOS), no luck. Re-loaded Windows 10 and started over, and loaded most recent drivers first this time instead of starting with my out-dated mobo disc. Got things running, but this time BSODs happened even more quickly. Before long I was turning blue before I even saw my Windows log-in screen. All BSOD stop-codes pointed towards memory issues so I tested both sticks individually, alternating between my 2 RAM slots. No improvement. Finally I went back to MSI's web page and bought a new set of sticks making absolutely sure they were on MSI's QVL to the digit. I picked up a set of Corsair ValuSelect sticks (faaaaaar less visually impressive than these G.Skill sticks), but upon re-installing Windows 10 and all drivers again (with the Corsair sticks installed from the start), I haven't seen a single blue screen since. I've run about 6 cumulative hours of Prime95's Blend Test, updated Windows 10 to include all updates since my initial Image file, and everything seems to be running perfectly! Once I had the computer running stable on the Corsair RAM, I pulled it out and put the G.Skill back in. Blue Screen upon first boot-up before even reaching the log-in. I contacted G.Skill's customer support. They asked if I had the most recent BIOS loaded and I replied that I did. They asked if I'd run Memcheck to validate the RAM and I replied that the computer won't run long enough to initiate Memcheck (or even boot into Safe Mode for that matter), and I never heard from them again. I would sell this memory second-hand because it's no good to me, but honestly I don't know if it's damaged or just incompatible so I'm hesitant to unload it. I'll probably try and RMA it still, and then sell the replacements since then I know they're brand new. The tl;dr version: mobo QVL > RAM QVL.
On reddit most people have limited success getting to 3000 or 3200 with a 1st Gen Ryzen let alone stable at 3333 so I was pretty happy with that. Thanks to g.skill customer service for helping me figure out all I needed to do was upgrade to a 3rd gen Ryzen to take advantage of the full speed of this ram. I was actually very happy with the 3333mhz performance so I was over the moon happy when I actually got it to 4400. I probably wouldn't have even tried it after upgrading to the 5900X if it wasn't for their advice. Mind blown. Attached screenshots so you can see the Passmark difference before and after the CPU upgrade and RAM overclock from 3333mhz to 4400mhz. Big difference!!! Thank you g.Skill customer service. You guys rock!!! I'm extremely happy. MSI Pro-VDH ... MoreOn reddit most people have limited success getting to 3000 or 3200 with a 1st Gen Ryzen let alone stable at 3333 so I was pretty happy with that. Thanks to g.skill customer service for helping me figure out all I needed to do was upgrade to a 3rd gen Ryzen to take advantage of the full speed of this ram. I was actually very happy with the 3333mhz performance so I was over the moon happy when I actually got it to 4400. I probably wouldn't have even tried it after upgrading to the 5900X if it wasn't for their advice. Mind blown. Attached screenshots so you can see the Passmark difference before and after the CPU upgrade and RAM overclock from 3333mhz to 4400mhz. Big difference!!! Thank you g.Skill customer service. You guys rock!!! I'm extremely happy. MSI Pro-VDH Wifi motherboard, Ryzen 5900X, GT 1030 GPU (soon to be an RTX 3050), EVGA Supernova 550GA, Cougar MX330 Case, Uphere jRGB Fans, and Airgoo flexible light strips.
- Gigabyte X570SI - AMD Ryzen 5950X When going beyond 3,200MHz the CPU's memory controller is key. The frequency scaling is quite good and it would boot at 4,000MHz with 2,000MHz Infinity Fabric, but I couldn't get it stable enough to run 24/7. Also tried 3600MHz @ C16 and pure 1T but it wouldn't run stable at all. At these high speeds or tight timings, I would fault the CPU over the RAM. The main challenge here is capacity vs. speed. I settled for 3,800MHz @ C18 which is acceptable given the large capacity. I have tested with TESTMEM5 using 1usmus tests and it's solid with the ZenTimings values from the pics. If you want capacity and only have 2 RAM slots this is a good kit.
I've always GSkill some people will say that they aren't what they used to be. I don't believe that I've been a gskill supporter 4 years like 2007/2008 but there's a few reasons why I still stick with him number one when you find an issue with one of their sticks they asked a single question. They just tell you here's the address here's the rma we will take care of it. There's no beating around the bush sure arguing or fighting or it's just simple Pleasant and I wish majority of customer service nowadays would act like that. I still have DDR3 first generation Ram 1600 MHz I think and I had to replace that twice and one was recent like a year ago 0 questions they said no problem they just want a proof of my receipt now that ram ungodly old but they still did it no ... MoreI've always GSkill some people will say that they aren't what they used to be. I don't believe that I've been a gskill supporter 4 years like 2007/2008 but there's a few reasons why I still stick with him number one when you find an issue with one of their sticks they asked a single question. They just tell you here's the address here's the rma we will take care of it. There's no beating around the bush sure arguing or fighting or it's just simple Pleasant and I wish majority of customer service nowadays would act like that. I still have DDR3 first generation Ram 1600 MHz I think and I had to replace that twice and one was recent like a year ago 0 questions they said no problem they just want a proof of my receipt now that ram ungodly old but they still did it no questions asked that's why I stick with them and typically it's a fast turnaround time with in a week now the first stick of memory that I had was a red Kit from way back in the day and I had problems when I said hey can I get a blue kit there like yeah no problem. I believe in that company because it believes in us the consumer to be honest that's what we need. Typically companies that make millions typically push us to the side because you no longer need us. They still care and they're here to stay
I would take the two negative reviews with a grain of salt... Those jabronis obviously don't have a clue what they're talking about. Initially I, too, believed one of the sticks may have been faulty. Upon further tinkering in the bios I determined that neither stick was faulty. I just hadn't figured my bios out entirely. I've now been using these sticks at the 4776 setting without *any* crashes in well over 24 hours of total gameplay now. warzone and halo infinite. max settings. idle fps is 110-120 When I run gpu benchmark my sticks are at the very top, somewhere around 120% or better. the rgb works perfectly and is very cool, like a black guy cool. My fps is through the roof, on 2k moniror I'm getting never less than 80 fps with a 3060 short card at 92% power/fan ... MoreI would take the two negative reviews with a grain of salt... Those jabronis obviously don't have a clue what they're talking about. Initially I, too, believed one of the sticks may have been faulty. Upon further tinkering in the bios I determined that neither stick was faulty. I just hadn't figured my bios out entirely. I've now been using these sticks at the 4776 setting without *any* crashes in well over 24 hours of total gameplay now. warzone and halo infinite. max settings. idle fps is 110-120 When I run gpu benchmark my sticks are at the very top, somewhere around 120% or better. the rgb works perfectly and is very cool, like a black guy cool. My fps is through the roof, on 2k moniror I'm getting never less than 80 fps with a 3060 short card at 92% power/fan speed and I never see temps above 62-63c with my lian li 215 case. this ram is reasonably priced for what you are getting.
| General | |
| Capacity | 64 GB: 2 x 32 GB |
| Upgrade Type | Generic |
| Memory | |
| Type | DRAM memory kit |