Silicon Power XPOWER Zenith RGB Review 1

Silicon Power XPOWER Zenith RGB Review

Value & Conclusion »

Pushing for Speed

With testing out of the way, I endeavored to see if these sticks have any headroom. For Intel, I kept the same procedure I have been using, leaving all settings at their XMP defaults and then increasing the frequency until the system loses stability.


I was able to achieve 4100 MHz with all other XMP settings at their default, a good result for a high-capacity kit.


For AMD overclocking, I generally like to dig a little deeper. First, I follow the same procedure as with Intel to find the highest-possible frequency with XMP timings. Next, I normally set the frequency to 3600 MHz before using DRAM Calculator for Ryzen to optimize timings. If the "Fast" preset is not viable, start with the "safe" settings and try to at least get the primary timings as close to the "Fast" preset as possible. I will then normally bench each setting with AIDA64 to showcase what kind of benefits you can expect from each, while including the default (non-XMP) settings as a base reference point.


I was able to achieve 4066 MHz stable with the Silicon Power XPOWER Zenith RGB on my MEG X570 ACE with the XMP default timings. However, I was not able to tighten the timings at 3600 MHz.


There are no major gains to be had by tuning the Silicon Power XPOWER Zenith RGB on Ryzen systems.
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Jan 24th, 2025 01:45 EST change timezone

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