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Adata Releases its 3100 MHz XPG V3 Overclocking Memory

Tags:
  • RAM
  • ADATA
  • Components
  • Memory
Last response: in News comments
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July 22, 2014 2:47:09 PM

But why?
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July 23, 2014 4:48:40 AM

Flagship or extreme products generate excitement and brand recognition, and is cool
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July 23, 2014 6:18:16 AM

Latency is more important for RAM than bandwidth, wish they focus more on that.
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July 23, 2014 7:59:59 AM

Time to pick up 64GB of the stuff and go to ramdisk heaven.
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July 23, 2014 8:39:36 AM

Quote:
Quote:
But why?

because reasons


That is a good enough for me, DDR3 3500 next, probably will have a CAS latency of 15 out of the box though
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July 23, 2014 9:24:36 AM

Great for AMD APUs, not so much for anything else.
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July 23, 2014 9:34:50 AM

Can someone explain to me how this ram can be utilized? for instance lets take the i7 4770k CPU, it can support 1600mhz ram speeds and 32gb max.

This ram runs at 3100mhz but the cpu only supports 1600mhz. Where does the 3100mhz get utilized? Is there a way to OC the CPU to go from 1600mhz threshold to 3100mhz? I always thought if you are going to buy ram you should check what the CPU can support and not buy above it, as its not being utilized? If someone can explain where the ram speed comes into play if a CPU has max limit that is much lower than the rams speed that would be great.

see specs: http://ark.intel.com/products/75123/Intel-Core-i7-4770K...
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July 23, 2014 10:45:13 AM

Quote:
Can someone explain to me how this ram can be utilized? for instance lets take the i7 4770k CPU, it can support 1600mhz ram speeds and 32gb max.

You can overclock the memory controller too.
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July 23, 2014 2:49:23 PM

xenol said:
Quote:
Can someone explain to me how this ram can be utilized? for instance lets take the i7 4770k CPU, it can support 1600mhz ram speeds and 32gb max.

You can overclock the memory controller too.


yes but if the CPU can only process 1600mhz of speed then when is the 3100mhz speed being utilized? How do you stuff more speed into the CPU's processing if its limited to 1600mhz? if by 'overclock the memory controller' you mean up the speed that the CPU's limit is set at then that makes sense, but can a 1600mhz CPU OC the memory controller input from 1600 to 3100 without issues? the point im missing is where does this ram actually get utilized? what hardware combinations would be able to use it's potential? If the CPU can't read above 1600 speed, then what applications can you use that would take advantage of a memory controller running at 3100?

You have to forgive me as it's been a long time since I've studied the theory of computer hardware/systems and don't quite remember about how the motherboard components individually interconnect and where you could OC one thing and actually see a difference vs OCing a component and not seeing any difference due to limitations on the CPU or other areas.
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July 23, 2014 3:07:29 PM

Intel actually endorses overclocking the memory controller when using compatible memory via XMP. As long as your RAM and motherboard support it, it's perfectly safe and even recommended, especially on their flagship consumer grade CPU.

http://www.intel.com/content/www/us/en/gaming/extreme-m...
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July 29, 2014 11:47:40 AM

"No word on pricing or availability yet, but expect these to range from perfectly reasonably priced to absurdly expensive". This was hilarious. And so true.
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