V-Color PRISM II RGB DDR4-3600 MHz CL18 2x8 GB Review 4

V-Color PRISM II RGB DDR4-3600 MHz CL18 2x8 GB Review

Value & Conclusion »

Pushing For Speed

With testing out of the way, I endeavored to see if these sticks had 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 get 4000 MHz out of this kit with all other XMP settings at their default. Like many recent kits, pushing past that proved difficult. Raising voltages did not yield better results (highest tested: DRAM: 1.5 V, VCCSA: 1.35 V, and VCCIO: 1.3 V).


For AMD overclocking, I wanted to dig a little deeper. First, I followed the same procedure as with Intel to find the maximum possible frequency with XMP timings. Next, I set the frequency to 3600 MHz and used DRAM Calculator for Ryzen to optimize the timings. Since the "fast" preset was unstable, I started with the "safe" settings and tried to at least get the primary timings as close to the "fast" preset as possible. I then benched each setting with AIDA64 to showcase what kind of benefits you can expect from each. I also included the default (non-XMP) settings as a base reference point.


I was able to squeeze 4200 MHz out of the V-Color PRISM II RGB on my MEG X570 ACE with the XMP default timings. For timings, the "Fast" preset would not boot, but I did get the primary timings down from the "safe" preset.

AIDA64





Looking at the graphs, there really isn't much benefit to overclocking this kit past XMP settings, which isn't too surprising as this kit is already in an optimal position for Ryzen use.
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Feb 11th, 2025 06:33 EST change timezone

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