Thursday, August 6th 2020

Transcend Releases DDR4 3200 MHz Industrial Modules

Transcend, a leading brand of industrial-grade memory products and storage solutions, recently announced the release of a new series of industrial-grade DDR4-3200 memory modules. Aiming at 5G networking and intelligent computing at the edge, DDR4-3200 memory modules feature high transmission bandwidth at 3200MT/s, low latency, and low power consumption, running at 1.2 V. The line-up includes Unbuffered Long-DIMM, Unbuffered SO-DIMM, ECC Long-DIMM, ECC SO-DIMM, and Registered Long-DIMM, addressing the varied, and often strict, form factor requirements of vertical markets. Fully complied with JEDEC specification, DDR4-3200 memory modules are optimized for Intel, AMD, and ARM processors. The DDR4-3200 DIMMs are ready to power up embedded telecommunication, in-vehicle, gaming, and smart healthcare applications in the approaching AIoT decade.
Major-grade DRAM chips sourced directly from first-tier manufacturers

Transcend sources every DRAM chip it uses in industrial-grade memory modules directly from the world's most reputable manufacturers. These ICs are rated "major-grade", meaning they are originally branded and trademarked, and undergo the original manufacture's in-house testing procedures to manifest the highest standard of quality.

For embedded desktops, high-end laptops, and edge computing

As industries begin utilizing 5G infrastructure, demand for high-performance, large-capacity memory grows. Transcend's DDR4-3200 memory modules feature capacities from 8 GB to 32 GB, enabling overclocking for high-end servers, computers, workstations, unmanned devices, AI-powered equipment, and smart systems from the core to the edge.

Low power consumption at 1.2 V

DDR4 cuts energy needs by running at just 1.2 V. These modules consume far less power than their predecessors DDR3, DDR2, and DDR. While the world prepares for future memory-hungry core processors and motherboards, the DDR4 keeps its energy budget low.

Future-compatible memory that transmits data at 3200MT/s

In the 5G era, large volumes of data are being generated and processed in real-time by connected edge devices, blurring the line between telecommunications and computer networking. This creates a need for short response times and low redundancy. DDR4-3200 memory modules feature low latency and ultra-high transfer speeds at 3200MT/s, fueling the 5G revolution by meeting data transmission and computing demands.

Product Line-up
Source: Transcend
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11 Comments on Transcend Releases DDR4 3200 MHz Industrial Modules

#1
Athlonite
DDR4-3200 memory modules feature low latency? So what are they calling low latency as I notice there's zero written about it in the article.
Oh NVM found it on their site CAS Latency CL22
um yeah OK I don't call that low latency I call that pretty shit latency
Posted on Reply
#2
Candor
I'm sorry. Is it 2014?
Posted on Reply
#3
Ubersonic
AthloniteDDR4-3200 memory modules feature low latency? So what are they calling low latency as I notice there's zero written about it in the article.
Oh NVM found it on their site CAS Latency CL22
um yeah OK I don't call that low latency I call that pretty shit latency
It's actually pretty good, the thing is this is a 3200mhz module, not a factory overclocked 2133/2400mhz module with 5" heat spreaders running 3200mhz XMP at 1.35v which is proberbly what you're using as a basis for comparison.
Posted on Reply
#4
EarthDog
So..................... are these 3200 MHz JEDEC, so no XMP, right? I assume with CL22 that is JEDEC as we've seen in other articles popping up here lately.
CandorI'm sorry. Is it 2014?
You aware aware that memory timings were a lot LOWER then, right?
Posted on Reply
#5
Candor
Rated to work from 0°C to 85°C. I don't know how that compares to our everyday ram?
Posted on Reply
#6
EarthDog
CandorRated to work from 0°C to 85°C. I don't know how that compares to our everyday ram?
Me either... you may be able to look it up though. Also, these sticks are -40-85C according to the chart in the first post. Looks like the other types of sticks are 0-85C.... which I'd imagine is normal? No clue. I've cooled memory with liquid nitrogen before and that is well below -40C. This is just a PR so.........
Posted on Reply
#7
Vya Domus
CandorRated to work from 0°C to 85°C. I don't know how that compares to our everyday ram?
Probably in no tangible way.
Posted on Reply
#8
Athlonite
UbersonicIt's actually pretty good, the thing is this is a 3200mhz module, not a factory overclocked 2133/2400mhz module with 5" heat spreaders running 3200mhz XMP at 1.35v which is probably what you're using as a basis for comparison.
And your point is?. CL22 is not low latency in my book regardless of the way they get it to run also my heat spreaders are not 5" tall
Posted on Reply
#9
Voluman
But, it seems everyone miss the keyword --> industrial
Posted on Reply
#10
lexluthermiester
UskompufFully complied with JEDEC specification
I wonder how this is accomplished...
Posted on Reply
#11
EarthDog
UbersonicIt's actually pretty good, the thing is this is a 3200mhz module, not a factory overclocked 2133/2400mhz module with 5" heat spreaders running 3200mhz XMP at 1.35v which is proberbly what you're using as a basis for comparison.
Forest through trees... forest through the trees.

Who GAF what the ICs are, really?
Posted on Reply
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