
Corsair Vengeance LPX
2 x 8GB, 3000 MHz, DDR4-RAM, DIMM
Corsair Vengeance LPX
2 x 8GB, 3000 MHz, DDR4-RAM, DIMM
The DIMMs are Dual Rank
Hello Josh, No, you don't have to set anything. The only important thing is the dual channel (if you look at the RAM slots, it is always 1+3 and 2+4 with 4 slots). But since you buy 2 additional slots, this is done automatically anyway, you don't have to set anything unless you want to overclock the RAM (voltage etc.).
It is another supplier, we can't obtain the product for the price of 119chf at the moment.
Hello, Yes, it works, it's on the list. CORSAIR CMK64GX4M4B3600C18 ver4.31 64GB(16GB*4) DS 18-19-19-39 1.35V http://dlcdnet.asus.com/pub/ASUS/mb/LGA1151/MAXIMUS_IX_EXTREME/Z270_ROG_QVL.pdf https://www.asus.com/ch-de/Motherboards/ROG-MAXIMUS-IX-FORMULA/HelpDesk_QVL/
Servus. I would choose 2 slots with 32 GB each. Then you still have the option to upgrade to 128 GB with an additional 2 x 32 GB. Greetings from Bavaria
guggst du hier: https://www.msi.com/Motherboard/support/B450M-PRO-VDH-PLUS#support-mem-14
yes, these fit. but you have to activate xmp in uefi.
No. You need DDR3 RAM and not DDR4 RAM. Please check the specifications of your mainboard. -> https://www.asus.com/ch-de/Motherboards/H87ME/specifications/ -> DDR3 1600/1333/1066 MHz. For example the following product: HyperX Fury (2x, 8GB, DDR3-1600, DIMM 240)
Unfortunately, there is no information on this from the manufacturer. The only information that is usually written on the RAM is the voltage, which is 1.20V for this product.
it's quite unlikely. they are for desktop pc-s, they are quite big with heatsinks. laptops need much smaller ram modules. i think it should be possible to filter the results for laptop rams.
No, this is DDR4 RAM and that motherboard is only compatible with DDR5.
yes,but why so weak ram...you could go up to ddr4-5000 oc with this board...here more infos about the board...https://www.asus.com/ch-de/motherboards-components/motherboards/tuf-gaming/tuf-gaming-b560-plus-wifi/
Unfortunately, we have no additional information. The stock is probably mixed up. In case of matching bar codes, our logistics considers different versions as the same one.
Hello, I don't know. Sorry
Yes, right. Mine's warranty expires in 2052.
Unfortunately, it is not possible to tell the RAM version exactly. The suppliers logistics-team can not separate them, due to matching bar codes.
The memory kit has a height of 34mm and is compatible with the MSI MEG X570 Unify motherboard and the AMD Ryzen 7 5800X, but the motherboard needs an upgrade to work with the CPU.
Unfortunately, we do not have the exact version information. We have different sources of supply here and the version can be different depending on the order. However, I would like to thank you for your advice and hope that we will optimise this process in the future to better distinguish between the individual versions.
Yes, the set is not listed on the QVL list of the mainboard, but the modules meet the specifications of both mainboard and CPU: https://www.asrock.com/mb/AMD/B550M%20Pro4/#MemoryCEZ AMD still specifies 3200Mhz as optimal clock for the Cezanne chip, so with DDR4-4000 you are very "overkill", I found a good video about it: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DjnoLlQkmsg If you rebuild the system from scratch, please note that the B550M Pro4 supports the 5600G processor only from BIOS 1.8 and you may have to update with your old processor: https://www.asrock.com/mb/AMD/B550M%20Pro4/#CPU
Timings are: CL 16-20-20-38, which is slower than theirs. Most likely the sticks are compatible (maybe with manual timings or not the same frequency), but with RAM you can't guarantee that. If you want to be sure, you either have to ask Corsair or buy a 64GB kit and possibly sell the old RAM.
Hi Kirrfactor You can just buy this kit again with the same latency you already have. So 15. However, I don't know how much it's worth it. The kit is already quite old. For your application, however, I could imagine that you could still tickle out a few reserves at a reasonable price.
The speed is specified with DDR4-XXXX, on your mainboard the supported speed is described with DDR4-2133 / DDR4-2400, with XMP (Extreme Memory Profile) you can achieve higher speeds, e.g. especially Ryzen processors benefit from this. The RAM is therefore compatible, but you may not be able to use the full speed (DDR4-3000), so the better choice would be to use slower (and partly cheaper) DDR4-2133/2400 RAM, sometimes you can also find DDR4-2933/3000/3200 RAM which is even cheaper, you can also use this on DDR4-2133. Additional info from the manual/manufacturer's page: "Due to Intel® chipset limitations, DDR4 2133 MHz and higher memory modules run in XMP mode at the maximum transfer rate of DDR4 2133 Mhz."
With a little more patience when starting and deactivating XMP, everything now works. Sorry.
Joa, there are certainly better, I would go minimum 3200 MHz, but that fits otherwise.
Of course, you can also install only two bars. What is important is the assignment of banks 1 and 2 on the mainboard. It should also be taken into account that if the data of the memory bars are not identical, the overall performance of the "worse" memory bars is decisive.
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