Thursday, February 17th 2022

Crucial to End Ballistix RAM Production and Sales

Out of nowhere, Micron has announced that it will end production of its Ballistix RAM products that are the high-performance and gamer focused RAM products from its Crucial brand. The details available so far doesn't state a reason for the discontinuation of these products. That said, Crucial has launched a wide range of DDR5 products, but so far none under the Ballistix brand and that is obviously a permanent move now. The company said it would focus on "the development of Micron's DDR5 client and server product roadmap, along with the expansion of the Crucial memory and storage product portfolio."

Furthermore the press release mentioned that "the company will continue to support the performance compute and gaming communities with its award-winning SSD products, such as the Crucial P5 Plus Gen 4 PCIe NVMe SSD, Crucial P2 Gen 3 NVMe SSD, and the popular Crucial X6 and Crucial X8 portable SSDs." It seems like Micron has decided to change the focus of it's consumer focused Crucial brand yet again, as the company has done several times in the past, but it's going to remove a major player in the consumer DRAM market, which isn't a good thing, especially as Micron was one of few DRAM manufacturers to offer high-end RAM modules, since neither Samsung or SK-Hynix is in this market. That said, it looks like Crucial will at least continue to offer its standard RAM modules, but they tend to follow JEDEC spec and aren't particularly exciting.

Updated:
Teresa Kelley, Vice President and General Manager, Micron Commercial Products Group: "We remain focused on growing our NVMe and Portable SSD product categories, which both offer storage solutions for PC and console gamers. Additionally, Crucial JEDEC standard DDR5 memory provides mainstream gamers with DDR5-enabled computers with better high-speed performance, data transfers and bandwidth than previously available with Crucial Ballistix memory."
Source: PCPer
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85 Comments on Crucial to End Ballistix RAM Production and Sales

#76
wurschti
TheLostSwedeBut they're killing the Ballistix brand, it doesn't make sense, as they still sell DDR4 branded Ballistix RAM.
They also have a ton of "regular" Crucial branded DDR5 memory for sale.
I also hate it. I have used Ballistix in tons of builds and it's was always extremely solid.
Posted on Reply
#77
Veseleil
TheLostSwedeI didn't mean to roll back that far, just to the one prior to what you're currently using.
BIOS updates are not really a risk these days, not had one gone wrong since pre Y2K.
Besides, you have an MCU on your board so even if the flash went wrong you could still reflash the BIOS as many times as it would take, from a USB drive.
I know, just wanted to share my thoughts. It just scares the hell out of me anyway. I'd still prefer Gigabyte's dual BIOS over any other safe method.
Posted on Reply
#78
bug
VeseleiloI know, just wanted to share my thoughts. It just scares the hell out of me anyway. I'd still prefer Gigabyte's dual BIOS over any other safe method.
Well, even Gigabyte is phasing out dual BIOS. But now you can flash BIOS straight from a USB stick, most of the times without a CPU installed. So, if it goes south, you just put the original BIOS back onto the stick and flash that.

But I'm with you, I prefer proper dual-BIOS. And I'm about to give that up, I need a mobo for my AL and dual-BIOS is not an option anymore :(
Posted on Reply
#79
ThrashZone
Hi,
If the bios chip was easy to replace it wouldn't be so bad evga does it this way.
But yes I do prefer dual bios on mother boards and gpu's :cool:
Posted on Reply
#80
AleXXX666
Selayaguess they finally realised their shitty ics arent up to speed for this kind of market
b-die fan here? :D
puma99dk|32GB (2x16GB) 3200/3600Mhz.

These kits are on the QVL list:
3200Mhz 16-18-18-36
eu.crucial.com/memory/ddr4/bl2k16g32c16u4w/ct19853583
eu.crucial.com/memory/ddr4/bl2k16g32c16u4wl/ct19853410

3600Mhz 16-18-18-36
eu.crucial.com/memory/ddr4/bl2k16g36c16u4w/ct19853666
eu.crucial.com/memory/ddr4/bl2k16g36c16u4wl/ct19853489

G.Skill is too expensive here and the Kingston ram is not worth their price and I am done arguing with Gigabyte about RAM support to JEDEC specifications because they only support ram on their QVL list everything else doesn't matter that's what their support told me.
maybe it's time to get an MSI mobo which has EXCELLENT feature called "memory try it!" which will nearly 99% run any ram ez. SH*TABYTE is only for cheapo systems, their ram compatibility is worse than no-name china mobos.
Posted on Reply
#81
Veseleil
Managed to get better latency with the newest BIOS:
Posted on Reply
#82
CubanB
Does anyone know how this affects the "lifetime warranty" of these RAM sticks? I have a bunch of them, and was asssuming if any of them went bad, I could send them back and get free replacements. I was assured via their customer service that this would be the case. Now.. if they are end of life.. how does that work? Is the warranty non existent, or would they be able to take other measures, for example store credit, or sending alternative RAM? Or maybe they have a bunch of older RAM stockpiled, refurbished etc?
Posted on Reply
#83
zlobby
CubanBDoes anyone know how this affects the "lifetime warranty" of these RAM sticks? I have a bunch of them, and was asssuming if any of them went bad, I could send them back and get free replacements. I was assured via their customer service that this would be the case. Now.. if they are end of life.. how does that work? Is the warranty non existent, or would they be able to take other measures, for example store credit, or sending alternative RAM? Or maybe they have a bunch of older RAM stockpiled, refurbished etc?
Honestly, 'lifetime warranty' is the best con ever devised.
Posted on Reply
#84
80-watt Hamster
CubanBDoes anyone know how this affects the "lifetime warranty" of these RAM sticks? I have a bunch of them, and was asssuming if any of them went bad, I could send them back and get free replacements. I was assured via their customer service that this would be the case. Now.. if they are end of life.. how does that work? Is the warranty non existent, or would they be able to take other measures, for example store credit, or sending alternative RAM? Or maybe they have a bunch of older RAM stockpiled, refurbished etc?
Should a replacement be offered (As zlobby alluded to, "lifetime" is a slippery term as relates to warranty), it'll be either refurb or as close a product as they have available.
Posted on Reply
#85
bug
CubanBDoes anyone know how this affects the "lifetime warranty" of these RAM sticks? I have a bunch of them, and was asssuming if any of them went bad, I could send them back and get free replacements. I was assured via their customer service that this would be the case. Now.. if they are end of life.. how does that work? Is the warranty non existent, or would they be able to take other measures, for example store credit, or sending alternative RAM? Or maybe they have a bunch of older RAM stockpiled, refurbished etc?
They simply point out why your lifetime is over. Problem solved.
Posted on Reply
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