- Joined
- Sep 15, 2011
- Messages
- 6,716 (1.39/day)
Processor | Intel® Core™ i7-13700K |
---|---|
Motherboard | Gigabyte Z790 Aorus Elite AX |
Cooling | Noctua NH-D15 |
Memory | 32GB(2x16) DDR5@6600MHz G-Skill Trident Z5 |
Video Card(s) | ZOTAC GAMING GeForce RTX 3080 AMP Holo |
Storage | 2TB SK Platinum P41 SSD + 4TB SanDisk Ultra SSD + 500GB Samsung 840 EVO SSD |
Display(s) | Acer Predator X34 3440x1440@100Hz G-Sync |
Case | NZXT PHANTOM410-BK |
Audio Device(s) | Creative X-Fi Titanium PCIe |
Power Supply | Corsair 850W |
Mouse | Logitech Hero G502 SE |
Software | Windows 11 Pro - 64bit |
Benchmark Scores | 30FPS in NFS:Rivals |
Isn't the bandwidth of DDR4-3200 already large enough to feed a GPU raw data on a 4K game, for example? I'm just curious how will DDR5 will improve gaming performance, and not just server and database apps...at DDR5-6400, the chips on the board will run at the same speed than DDR4-3200, but it will have twice the bus Bandwidth to transfert the data. That decoupling happened with all of the DDR generation.
the memory timing are tied to the bus speed. so at DDR5-6400, a CL of 32 is the equivalent of a DDR4-3200 CL16. The memory will response as fast with both settings but the DDR5 will have twice the bus bandwidth.
So for people that are maniac of timing, they think that DDR5 will be slower because of that. But overall, DDR5 will deliver twice the bandwidth with similar timings and we will see faster memory down the road. The fact that each DIMM have it's own voltage controller will probably even help memory overclocker and stuff.