@1usmus Thank you for taking the time to write this article (and develop the DRAM Calculator for Ryzen). I plan to read through it more thoroughly this weekend.
I didn't see this mentioned, and I haven't seen anyone else mention this, but the biggest problem I've found is knowing which memory kits to buy (not just for Ryzen, but also for Intel). It's almost a complete crapshoot. There are only a handful of memory kits that I know should be, for example, all-but-guaranteed single-rank Samsung B-die. Through deductive reasoning, reading datasheets and personal experience, I've determined those kits to be 8 GB DIMMs with speeds/timings of 2400 MT/s C10, 3200 MT/s C14, 3600 MT/s C15, 4133 MT/s C17, and mostly anything above 4133 MT/s, whether it's C18 or C19. However, that leaves
a lot of memory kits in the unknown category.
I was surprised to see the 3600 MT/s C19 Hynix kit that was mentioned because I never would have thought about purchasing one of the highest CAS latency 3600 MT/s kits. For the most part, I've had good luck with Hynix for Ryzen (though not as good as single-rank Samsung B-die, of course), so I'm not afraid to purchase another kit with those ICs. I do avoid Micron, though.
I haven't had very good luck with Micron (as far as overclocking goes) on either AMD or Intel platforms. Maybe that will change with the new Micron H/E-die (16 nm) ICs mentioned in the article. Fortunately, Micron is a
little easier to avoid; don't buy Crucial/Ballistix-branded memory. Of course, nearly any kit below roughly 3200 MT/s C16 could be using Micron ICs (and a lot of them are). Could
this memory kit possibly be using some of the new H/E-die (16 nm) ICs? At the price they're currently asking, I'd rather buy a kit of all-but-guaranteed Samsung B-die for the same or less.