Tuesday, February 14th 2023
GIGABYTE Enables 192GB Maximum Memory Support on its LGA1700 DDR5 Motherboards
GIGABYTE TECHNOLOGY Co. Ltd, a leading manufacturer of motherboards, graphics cards, and hardware solutions, today announced that its Intel 700 and 600 series DDR5 motherboards can support 24 GB and 48 GB memory modules without BIOS update. This boosts the maximum RAM support from 128 GB to 192 GB on four DIMMs, and 64 GB to 96 GB on two DIMMs. The maximum speed runs up to XMP 7000 on 2 DIMMs 24 GB configuration.
Users can enjoy an effortless overall boost of memory capacity and system performance on both Intel XMP and AMD EXPO platforms, as well as a productivity uplift for multitasking gamers and RAM demanding users. Get your GIGABYTE motherboards now and enjoy the boost. To avail this, update to the latest BIOS on your compatible motherboard.
Users can enjoy an effortless overall boost of memory capacity and system performance on both Intel XMP and AMD EXPO platforms, as well as a productivity uplift for multitasking gamers and RAM demanding users. Get your GIGABYTE motherboards now and enjoy the boost. To avail this, update to the latest BIOS on your compatible motherboard.
14 Comments on GIGABYTE Enables 192GB Maximum Memory Support on its LGA1700 DDR5 Motherboards
192GB is quite a lot, but i also feel like i've seen larger amounts on other sockets recently (They may have been HEDT like threadripper, tho)
The ones who seek more ram but want to stay on aesthetic desktop motherboards are those who intend to use memory consuming apps but then want a gaming flagship processor along side.
Server is a different story where HEDT platform makes best of both desktop and server combined. Threadripper has proven to be considerable choice where lanes and memory capacity with high bandwidth meets demand.
I'll just look it up on wiki, was busy at the time.
Looks like the current limit is 128GB on all the platforms prior to this announcement, mostly because higher capacity sticks dont exist - but early reports on AM5 report DDR5 is an "upto" 512GB situation (probably requiring quite a few BIOS updates for AMD and intel to work on current platforms
What was the story with past DDR generations? I remember some are running 4x2GB on some 775 chipsets that only officially support up to 4GB.
I'm good with 32GB system memory for now..
They're both trash and haven't reliably found errors in RAM since DDR3.
We use, in order of superiority: TestMem5 (Anta777 Extreme or ABSOLUT), Y-Cruncher, or GSAT.