Friday, October 7th 2022

Gigabyte Ushers Breakthrough Performance of XMP DDR5-7600 and DDR5-7950 O.C with Team Group

GIGABYTE TECHNOLOGY Co. Ltd, a leading manufacturer of motherboards, graphics cards, and hardware solutions, today revealed the breakthrough DDR5 performance of XMP DDR5-7600 and O.C. performance to DDR5-7950 under fan cooling on Z790 AORUS XTREME and MASTER motherboards with Team Group gaming modules T-FORCE DELTA RGB DDR5 7200 memory. Featuring Shielded Memory Routing of SMD memory DIMM, exclusive DDR5 overclocking BIOS setting, top-quality components, and enhanced design from hardware to firmware on motherboards, this performance proves GIGABYTE's strong leading role in product quality and performance.

To unleash the ultimate DDR5 performance, GIGABYTE Z790 AORUS XTREME and MASTER implement new generation Shielded Memory Routing design. By optimizing memory trace width, length, and style from HPC simulation to actual implementation, overall impedance is lowered between CPU memory controller and memory modules. Further with low signal-loss PCB, signal loss inside PCB and external interference are greatly reduced which can maintain high-speed DDR5 signal transmission to achieve higher DDR5 speed. In addition, the abundant BIOS setting of DDR5 Memory Upgrade and XMP 3.0 User Profile lead to the breakthrough performance of XMP DDR5-7600 and DDR5-7950 O.C. under fan cooling with T-FORCE DELTA RGB DDR5 7200 memory. The detailed memory information is listed in the memory support list of the motherboard.
This remarkable memory performance on Z790 AORUS XTREME and MASTER with T-FORCE DELTA RGB DDR5 7200 memory is only the beginning of GIGABYTE's supreme-performance motherboards. Z790 AORUS XTREME and MASTER are exclusively designed for the latest 13th Gen Intel Core processors. Featuring up to 20+1+2 phases digital power VRM design with each phase holding up to 105 amps Fins-Array III heatsink design, these motherboards are geared with the best power design and thermal management to unleash the extreme performance and optimized overclocking experience on the new generation multi-core K series Intel Core processors. The superb hardware and firmware design offers more stable signals to memory, and enable users to easily boost XMP and overclocking performance. Further through the with premium components and exclusive tuning function of optimized power supply, heat dissipation, and expansions, GIGABYTE Z790 motherboards boost the overall and overclocking performance of CPU and memories with premium compatibility, breakthrough performance, and low temperature. Moreover, featuring enhanced SMD PCIe 5.0 x16 and M.2 slots with EZ-Latch design, lightning-fast networking of 10GbE, and Wi-Fi 6E dedicated spectrum, GIGABYTE Z790 motherboards impress users by its remarkable performance and stability to become the perfect choice for Intel Z790 platform.
Source: Gigabyte
Add your own comment

27 Comments on Gigabyte Ushers Breakthrough Performance of XMP DDR5-7600 and DDR5-7950 O.C with Team Group

#26
Lesha
RandallFlaggI don't think chipset has much to do with it. It's a combination of the IMC and the motherboard construction (layers, and copper thickness).

Regular 6-layer 1oz copper motherboards don't seem to be able to go beyond DDR5-6200, usually rated for 6000. 6-layer 2oz copper seem to be rated for 6400 and do up to 6600.

The Z690 Aorus Master is an 8-layer 2oz copper motherboard.

Most everything I have seen on AM5 X670 or X670E is 8 layer. ASRock's cheapest X670E PG Lightning is 8 layer 1oz, while the higher models are 8 layer 2oz.

One of the new AM5 motherboards I saw was 14 layer. Might be worth a test, 14 layer vs 8 layer vs 6 layer.
How does 6-layer 2oz compare to 8-layer 1oz? I am comparing MSI and ASRock B650 motherboards respectively.
Posted on Reply
#27
RandallFlagg
LeshaHow does 6-layer 2oz compare to 8-layer 1oz? I am comparing MSI and ASRock B650 motherboards respectively.
I actually don't think there would be much difference in that comparison.

I'm honestly probably not the best person to ask on AM5, as I have Alder Lake. The brand that is good for AM5 seems to be a bit different than what I'd say for Alder Lake. From what I can tell, Zen 4 has more of an issue with the IMC lotto than the motherboard.

This thread probably is a good place to look if you want to run some high speed DDR5 on AM5:

www.overclock.net/threads/amd-zen-4-cpu-thread.1800041/page-28#post-29058951
Posted on Reply
Add your own comment
Dec 23rd, 2024 18:00 EST change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts