Wednesday, January 21st 2015

ADATA XPG Z1 DDR4-3333 Overclocking Memory Breaks New Record - 4255 MHz

ADATA Technology, a leading manufacturer of high-performance DRAM modules and NAND Flash application products, is honored to announce that its XPG Z1 DDR4 3333 Gold Edition computer memory is able to clock up to 4255MHz CL17 when used with an ASUS ROG Rampage V Extreme motherboard cooled with liquid nitrogen. This creates a new overclocking world record for production line DDR4 memory.

In cooperation with motherboard manufacturers, ADATA strives to achieve the best performance in DDR4 memory compliant with the Intel X99 architecture. The XPG Z1 DDR4 3333 Gold Edition breaks the record with extremely high clock frequency of 4255MHz CL17, impressing both gamers and standard CPU clock users alike with outstanding sustained performance, cooling and stability! XPG Z1 DDR4 3333 overclocking memory keeps stable supply to fulfill the market demand, enabling every overclocker, gamer or enthusiast to pursue the ultimate in performance.
World-renowned reporting authority CPU-Z tested and recorded the ADATA Technology XPG Z1 DDR4 3333 Gold Edition's recent record-breaking performance in a controlled laboratory environment.
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9 Comments on ADATA XPG Z1 DDR4-3333 Overclocking Memory Breaks New Record - 4255 MHz

#1
Uplink10
This is just disapponinting, DDR3 record at 4404MHz and now we get DDR4 record at 4255 MHz. Do they want to start selling low frequency DDR4 chips at first and then raise the frequency so they can say an advancement has been made, buy new chips with higher frequency?
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#2
DeNeDe
Still.. single channel, not even dual/quad.
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#3
HumanSmoke
Uplink10This is just disapponinting, DDR3 record at 4404MHz and now we get DDR4 record at 4255 MHz.

How long has DDR3 been on the market, and how long has DDR4 been on the market?
Uplink10Do they want to start selling low frequency DDR4 chips at first and then raise the frequency so they can say an advancement has been made, buy new chips with higher frequency?
You know that the first cutting edge DDR3 modules were 1333and before they were introduced you could buy DDR2-1250 off the shelf, or overclock your D9GMH/D9GKX equipped Ballistix/Firestix/Cellshock/G.Skill etc to around the same frequency with luck and a strong northbridge.
When DDR3 intro'd it was rated 1066, the DDR2 WR stood at 1296. The moral of the story is tech takes time to mature.
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#4
HumanSmoke
ReaderThey said that "DDR4 memories would start at 3200 MHz but they started to produce 2133 MHz DDR4."......
Absolute rubbish.
The memory bus speed will start at 2133MHz
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#5
Woomack
So far there is only one desktop DDR4 standard and it's DDR4-2133. In future will be more but right now everything above that is considered as overclocked ( even though well tested and guaranteed by manufacturer ). SPD profile includes JEDEC specs and on every desktop DDR4 it's about the same.
Server DDR4 are lower clocked than 2133.
On the other hand who cares how high is memory clock when memory bandwidth is limited because of IMC/cache clock. Probably it will change when we see Skylake but right now there is only one desktop chipset on the market.
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#6
Starlord
Did anyone notice that this is not even a world record? Already 2 others have higher scores..
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#7
Woomack
Maybe because they're kinda late with the news:
valid.x86.fr/e28r0i
it's result from Jan 8 while better results are from Jan 15/19
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#8
Aquinus
Resident Wat-man
WoomackOn the other hand who cares how high is memory clock when memory bandwidth is limited because of IMC/cache clock. Probably it will change when we see Skylake but right now there is only one desktop chipset on the market.
Not on servers with over 40 logical cores. Considering there are 6c/6t to 18c/36t Xeon parts, I suspect that bandwidth would best utilized by real hardware that needs it. A quad-core, or even a 6-core CPU isn't going to need this kind of bandwidth, but a 10c/20t part or more might.
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#9
Woomack
Of course in servers it's not an issue. Talking about bandwidth limit I meant more 3000+ memory kits on desktops.
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Nov 22nd, 2024 22:10 EST change timezone

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