G.Skill Trident Z5 RGB (2 x 16GB, 7800 MHz, DDR5 RAM, DIMM)
CHF629.–

G.Skill Trident Z5 RGB

2 x 16GB, 7800 MHz, DDR5 RAM, DIMM


Questions about G.Skill Trident Z5 RGB

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minddraftag

9 months ago

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ankabo

9 months ago • purchased this product

purchased this product
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According to the ASUS website, a maximum of 196 GB is possible. 4 x DIMM, max. 192GB, DDR5 7800+(OC)/7600(OC)/7400(OC)/7200(OC)/7000(OC)/6800(OC)/6600(OC)/6400(OC)/ 6200(OC)/ 6000(OC)/ 5800(OC)/ 5600/ 5400/ 5200/ 5000/ 4800 Non-ECC, Un-buffered Memory* If you have tightened the timings, you just have to check whether 4 modules can still cope with this. It is often possible to tune everything a little with 2 bars, but with 4 it is no longer possible. If this is the case, the bars give as much voltage as they can handle (I think max. 1.4V), then the chance of tuning is greater.
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enverkuzu90

1 year ago

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MarsonG

1 year ago

Can the RAM be used with AMD Expo?

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fisibubele

1 year ago • purchased this product

purchased this product
Unfortunately not, had to replace the bars later as they were causing problems on the x670e chip.
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Roumen

2 years ago

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l.degardin

2 years ago

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AlyxO

2 years ago • purchased this product

purchased this product
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You should also pay attention to the following. The ram sticks run at 4800 MHz in the bios by default. If you want to use the full speed of 7600 MHz, you can only insert 2 sticks into the board (not 4). So if you want 64gb Ram you should better buy 2x32gb and not 4x16gb.
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Anonymous

2 years ago

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Anonymous

2 years ago

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Davide23

2 years ago • purchased this product

purchased this product
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Hi Damian, simply explained, the smaller the latency the faster the memory. Described in more detail: Column Address Strobe Latency (CL or CAS Latency for short), also called memory latency, is the time required to address a column in the main memory of a computer. The measure of this is the required number of clock cycles, whereby a lower number is better. LG
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mattiamatto

2 years ago

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Anonymous

2 years ago • purchased this product

purchased this product
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Yes, the RAM is about 1 cm too high for me; however, I have a 7800X3D. The bracket for Intel should be about the same height. There should be enough space in the case to raise the fan, but I would only test it with the middle fan for now. For me, the cooling capacity is easily sufficient under full load. Alternatively, the asymmetrical fans like the NH-U12A could be interesting for me.
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GP-Informatik

2 years ago

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Agusta01

2 years ago • purchased this product

purchased this product
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I also have an ASUS Z690 motherboard for DDR5 Ram, I have 4x32gb in DDR5 so a total of 128gb, Intel 13900K, and 4080 TI 64gb graphics card. All running beautifully.
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gvf1

3 years ago

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Anonymous

3 years ago

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haendelben

3 years ago • purchased this product

purchased this product
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It depends on what you have in mind. There is no general better or worse. What you can say in general, however, is that if you work a lot with sequential reading and writing (compression/decompression, for example), then more Mhz would be better, for random access lower latencies would be better (gaming). But only up to a certain point, because the actual latency is formed from CAS and Mhz. In this case, even the 6400s would be better in both, though not noticeably for you most likely: CAS Latency CL 32 (corresponds to ~10.00ns) Row-to-Column Delay tRCD 39 (corresponds to ~12.19ns) Row Precharge Time tRP 39 (corresponds to ~12.19ns) Active-to-Precharge Time tRAS 102 (corresponds to ~31.88ns) vs. the 6000 CL30: CAS Latency CL 30 (corresponds to ~10.00ns) Row-to-Column Delay tRCD 38 (corresponds to ~12.67ns) Row Precharge Time tRP 38 (corresponds to ~12.67ns) Active-to-Precharge Time tRAS 96 (corresponds to ~32.00ns)

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