HyperX Fury (2 x 8GB, 2133 MHz, DDR4-RAM, DIMM)

HyperX Fury

2 x 8GB, 2133 MHz, DDR4-RAM, DIMM


Questions about HyperX Fury

What would you like to know?

Avatar

0 questions and answers

avatar
Xavior

9 years ago

avatar
Anonymous

9 years ago

Yes, you can do this without any problems. If you want to be sure, go to the specifications of the mainboards and look at the memory type and form factor (DDR4-RAM, DIMM 288). If you want to OC your CPU, it would be advisable to OC your RAM as well. Either via BIOS settings or use prefabricated DDR4-3000Mhz+ modules. Finally, my question to you: Why do you buy a 220Chf. motherboard when the slightly cheaper PRO Gaming can save you 60Chf? Do you really need all SATA and several internal USB 3.0 ports? Otherwise, have a nice day. Kind regards

avatar
Platin22

9 years ago

avatar
PerryRhodan

9 years ago

Helpful answer

Hello, I think these bars COULD pass for 'low profile'. I use them with a beQuiet Dark Rock 3 and it just about fits. When I look at your Noctua, it also works but only if you move the front fan up a bit with the brackets (which is what it is meant for, the fan is not fixed). Then it should fit, in my opinion it even fits if you don't adjust the fan, but the bars are not high :-)

avatar
martinseil

9 years ago

avatar
atmik

9 years ago

Helpful answer

Hello martinseil, it looks as if the PM has no idea about the matter at all and relies on meagre manufacturer specifications (which do not even indicate 1% of the various RAMs available) rather than on practical experience. Of course, practically all "normal" DDR4-2133Mhz RAM will run with the barebone, but it's important to always use standard memory without a sheet-metal heat sink from Kingston, for example. RAM only starts to go haywire when you have low latency times (CL) or high clock frequencies, or both together.

avatar
hamjambo

9 years ago

Downward compatible ?

avatar
PerryRhodan

9 years ago

Helpful answer

DDR4 Ram bars in a DDR3 board? No, on the one hand it is not possible due to the design and on the other hand due to the changed, lower voltages and the enormously higher clock rate. For DDR4 you need a new mainboard and CPU. I only switched to DDR4 because I had a new PC with a Skylake CPU, otherwise my 32GB DDR3 RAM would have been easily enough.

12 of 12 questions

To Top