According to my information, this basically also works together with other modules if you still have free slots. Please note that to control the RGB lighting you must use the appropriate software from your mainboard manufacturer or the iCUE software from Corsair (it is best to use only one software to avoid conflicts).
sure...but you already know that this kit is not a ram...you can control this kit via the corsair icue4 software and deactivate the rgb....then it looks from the outside as if you have four ram slots installed....here is more info about the product...https://www.corsair.com/de/de/Kategorien/Produkte/Zubeh%C3%B6r-%7C-Teile/PC-Komponenten/Arbeitsspeicher/CORSAIR-VENGEANCE-RGB-PRO-Light-Enhancement-Kit/p/CMWLEKIT2
Since I use the system on an older INTEL board (without any problems), I can't help you much.
In any case, it is important that the latest UEFI (BIOS) is installed.
You might find the problem there (in the BIOS).
Attention! This is not RAM but only an optical light show if that was not clear... Otherwise, it has the same dimensions as a normal RAM stick, so I would try it out with one at best. Unfortunately I don't have the same motherboard, but the bars are roughly flush with the socket on the board. Otherwise, turn the pump with hoses up/down.
You would have to buy real ones if you don't happen to have the equipment that a memory manufacturer has lying around at home.
These are really just dummies.
From the description: "The Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro Series DDR4 light expansion modules complete the look of your computer by filling empty DDR4 slots with over ten ultra-bright, individually addressable RGB LEDs each. You can choose from dozens of preset lighting profiles, or design your own, or experiment with millions of customisable patterns and colours."
Consequently, it is not a normal working memory you are looking for.
Yes, they work perfectly! However, the prerequisite is that you already have the Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro
2x, 16GB, DDR4-3200, DIMM 288 already integrated in the system.
If your mainboard supports quad-channel, this is certainly better. But if your mainboard only supports dual-channel, you can save 25CHF here. To use quad-channel, you must also have 4x identical RAM.