Wednesday, July 31st 2019
G.SKILL Releases Optimized DDR4-3800 CL14 Memory Kit for AMD Ryzen 3000 & X570 Platform
G.SKILL International Enterprise Co., Ltd., the world's leading manufacturer of extreme performance memory and gaming peripherals, is releasing a highly optimized, extremely low latency Trident Z Neo series DDR4-3800MHz CL14 RGB memory kit in 16 GB (8 GB x2) and 32 GB (8 GB x4) capacities for the AMD Ryzen 3000 series CPU and X570 chipset platform. Built with the powerful Samsung B-die component, this is the perfect DDR4 memory kit for those looking to push the limits of memory bandwidth on your new AMD Ryzen 3000 platform.
At this point, it's well-known that memory performance with the new AMD Ryzen 3000 processor series is best when Infinity Fabric being tied to the memory clock at a 1:1 ratio. The G.SKILL R&D team is dedicated to push the performance boundaries even further and developed a high-frequency, low-latency memory kit at DDR4-3800 CL14-16-16-36 in capacity configurations of 8GBx2 and 8GBx4, reaching a superb memory bandwidth performance under the optimal 1:1 ratio.As seen in the screenshot above, this Trident Z Neo memory kit is running at DDR4-3800 CL14-16-16-36 in 8GBx2 capacity with the AMD Ryzen 9 3900X processor and the MSI MEG X570 GODLIKE motherboard, reaching a tested memory bandwidth of 58 GB/s, 56 GB/s, and 58 GB/s for read, write, and copy, respectively.
Complete Stability & Reliability
Like any G.SKILL memory kit, the specifications must remain fully stable under a memory stress test, as shown in the screenshots below, showing the 32 GB (8 GB x4) memory kit operating on an ASUS ROG CROSSHAIR VIII Formula motherboard with the AMD Ryzen 5 3600X processor and the 16 GB (8 GB x2) memory kit running on the MSI MEG X570 GODLIKE motherboard with the AMD Ryzen 9 3900X processor.
At this point, it's well-known that memory performance with the new AMD Ryzen 3000 processor series is best when Infinity Fabric being tied to the memory clock at a 1:1 ratio. The G.SKILL R&D team is dedicated to push the performance boundaries even further and developed a high-frequency, low-latency memory kit at DDR4-3800 CL14-16-16-36 in capacity configurations of 8GBx2 and 8GBx4, reaching a superb memory bandwidth performance under the optimal 1:1 ratio.As seen in the screenshot above, this Trident Z Neo memory kit is running at DDR4-3800 CL14-16-16-36 in 8GBx2 capacity with the AMD Ryzen 9 3900X processor and the MSI MEG X570 GODLIKE motherboard, reaching a tested memory bandwidth of 58 GB/s, 56 GB/s, and 58 GB/s for read, write, and copy, respectively.
Complete Stability & Reliability
Like any G.SKILL memory kit, the specifications must remain fully stable under a memory stress test, as shown in the screenshots below, showing the 32 GB (8 GB x4) memory kit operating on an ASUS ROG CROSSHAIR VIII Formula motherboard with the AMD Ryzen 5 3600X processor and the 16 GB (8 GB x2) memory kit running on the MSI MEG X570 GODLIKE motherboard with the AMD Ryzen 9 3900X processor.
53 Comments on G.SKILL Releases Optimized DDR4-3800 CL14 Memory Kit for AMD Ryzen 3000 & X570 Platform
Better off with uk.pcpartpicker.com/product/cvGj4D/team-dark-pro-16gb-2-x-8gb-ddr4-3200-memory-tdpgd416g3200hc14adc01 and manually overclocking. It's literally the same chips.
I barely noticed a tiny 1-2% difference between 3000 CL16 and 3600 CL16... what is this one going to bring, another 1% ?
Totally not worth it.
For example, I set DOCP/XMP with GSKill Neo 3600 CL14 sticks and it sets it to 2:1. Most boards will flip around 3733.
So what is the golden rule for Ryzen 3000, will every chip do 1900mhz on Fclock?
But at stock voltage, it most likely crashes after 1800, or fails to boot completely.
I wouldn't do it though, that's a 14nm die that contains the IF and Memory controllers, it might not like the extra voltage.
1.5V should be fine but if your temperatures get up to mid 50C, that can causes stability issues too.
same compatibility than Intel...not other way around.
Wondering how is the expansion card compatibility on X570 motherboards. I don´t mean graphics cards, they work, but for ex. SATA controller cards, especially those using Asmedia´s controller chip.
I have Crosshair VI hero and if this card:
www.startech.com/Cards-Adapters/HDD-Controllers/SATA-Cards/2-Port-PCI-Express-SATA-6-Gbps-eSATA-Controller-Card~PEXESAT322I
is installed in any slot and some HDD connected to it, I can´t boot to windows because of 'Kernel security error' BSOD - two year old problem, multiple BIOS updates, Windows 10 OS versions and same problem persists. On my Intel systems, card works fine.
All tech review sites whenever they test motherboards, they only propably test graphics cards on them. If they work, five star score given for PCIe card compatibility.
You have any M.2 populated? If so,try removing all of them. Asus are the one to blame here,not the "CPU maker" :rolleyes:
-= edited=-
hzy4 caught it first :shadedshu:
3800 is possible, but it's a rare combination of things that needs to come together for it to work well and be stable.
Testing below by HiCookie
I don´t have M.2 drives - 8 HDDS and 2 SDDs so 10 SATA ports needed.
I'm also seeing some contradictory information in the posts above.
sure 1.5v is a bit to high in 2019
I might suggest using docking if your drive not critical though, or if that not your taste you wanna cek ASRock Fatal1ty X370 Professional Gaming .
... or better yet the new x570 :D