RAM
Such ennui probably has something
to do with the fact that your choice of memory module won’t make a huge difference
to the overall PC experience, either. That’s going to be the tough ask for manufacturers
of highperformance DDR4 memory modules in this new frontier of RAM: when even
the cheap stuff has to match the new Intel platform’s 2,133MHz starting point,
across four modules for the true quadchannel experience, you’re already talking
about some seriously quick memory.
As someone who
might have been Francis Bacon once said, “I am in blood stepp’d in so far that,
should I wade no more, returning were as tedious as go o’er.” He wasn’t
actually talking about some battle for a Scottish throne… he was referring to
the fact that once you’ve spent a vast sum of money on a new X99 motherboard
and Haswell-E processor, it’s as boring shopping about for a cheap memory kit
as it just dropping another fortune on a high performance Corsair set. Prescient
fellow, that Bacon
What the
higher-spec Vengeance kit can offer, though, is XMP 2.0. And what does XMP
stand for? Ease-ofuse. Okay, the acronym doesn’t work, but with XMP you don’t
have to worry about digging into the BIOS to get the best out of the kit, as
you can set the modules to run at their quoted box settings from most BIOS
front pages. So what can faster stuff like the Corsair Vengeance kit do that
the slightly slower Crucial kit can’t? The obvious answer is “pretty much
nothing”. As we said in the Crucial review, you can quickly get a picture of
which of these kits is the higher-performing through synthetic benchmarking,
but in real terms it’s far harder to see any performance difference. We would
say that, because of the added little heatspreader Corsair has gone with for
its Vengeance kit, we would expect it to last longer, but given the fact that
both of these sets have lifetime warranties from suppliers like
Overclockers, that ‘s close to becoming
a moot point, too.
In
head-to-head tests, this Corsair kit is clearly the better set of memory
modules, but we do have to think about price. You’re not really getting a lot
more, in real terms, by paying the price premium. That said, compared to the
previous generation of memory, there’s not a huge premium shifting up to DDR4
anyway. In fact, you wont find a 16GB DDR3 kit rated at 2,800MHz any cheaper
than these Corsair modules. In those terms, this kit is good value – these are leaner,
cheaper, quicker modules than the last generation. The problem is, that doesn’t
matter right now.
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good ram, like it
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