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There is definite advantages to 16GB over 8 GB in gaming, especially for cards that have relatively low vram for their performance level. 32 GB is a bit trickier. Tom's shows an improvement at 32 GB, but this is hard to determine if it is because it is running dual rank dual channel or from the extra ram.Outside some of the sims that can use a lot obviously (Citi builder have little limit with mods), there is some regular game that seem to do (even gain to go from 16 to 32 at certain stage of release pre-optimisation like early release of Cyberpunk and Flight Sim, on certain system it seem):
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The 0.1 and 1% mostly can be Completetly different if you are on the limit on some system:
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Very fast hard drive can make it less obvious
DDR5 is full of false advertisement, bad marketing and a lot of missunderstandings.
This is the reality of the current situation.
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There is no single rank 32GB DDR5 modules currently.
This means that if you want 64GB of DDR5 memory you have two options.
Get a 2x32GB dual rank modules.
Get a 4x16GB single rank modules.
In every cases you base frequency drops to a crappy 4GHz.
I'm using 4x16GB of Dominator 5600MHz C36 and I'm not able to drive them at 4.8GHz even with 1.35V on the memory and 1.25V on the memory controller/SA.
I need to drive my 1000€ of RAM on my 1200€ of motherboard (Asus Z690 Maximus Extreme) at 4.4GHz.
DDR5 at 4.4GHz is slower than DDR4 at 3.6GHz.
This means that I spent two times more to go slower than cheap DDR4 modules.
Don't make my mistake!!!
The problem with that is the extra bandwidth rarely if ever helps with most desktop applications or games. We saw this repeatedly with X58 and later quad channel HEDT systems where comparable CPU's were compared to their mainstream counterparts. Furthermore, the added trace paths increase motherboard cost and RAM upgrades are more expensive for the customer without any real benefit to it.Honestly, I wish they went tri channel ddr4 like they did with ddr3. 12GB would be solid for budget users, 24 GB would be great for the vast majority and 48 GB would be more than enough for power users. Beyond that, there is always HEDT.
Furthermore, trichannel ddr4 would easily outperform dual channel ddr5 until it further matured.
Optimized Windows 7/10 + Fallout 4 at max settings and 2k resolution would easily use over 11GB RAM back in 2016.I am not aware of any regular gaming PC that it can make good use of 16GB of RAM.
Wouldn't it be less trace paths for mATX and above since you would have 3 instead of 4? You could still run 2 paths or less with itx and below albeit a small performance decrease. Either way you get the lower latency.The problem with that is the extra bandwidth rarely if ever helps with most desktop applications or games. We saw this repeatedly with X58 and later quad channel HEDT systems where comparable CPU's were compared to their mainstream counterparts. Furthermore, the added trace paths increase motherboard cost and RAM upgrades are more expensive for the customer without any real benefit to it.
Not really. Most consumer workloads show the same performance on either dual or quad channel, so triple would end up being in the middle of the same. I run HEDT for PCIE lanes and more cores, but the RAM part is mostly a shrug even for me - and I'm using ramdisks for various things.Wouldn't it be less trace paths for mATX and above since you would have 3 instead of 4? You could still run 2 paths or less with itx and below albeit a small performance decrease. Either way you get the lower latency.
Perhaps software has mature some since x58 to take advantage of at least the tri channel, though maybe still not the quad channel of HEDT.
Micro-ATX boards usually have four slots. Mini-ITX boards have two. You would have six slots on most motherboards if we were using triple channel memory. Also, four slots doesn't use as many trace paths as you might think given that most boards these days use a daisy chain toplogy. I'm not sure if that would be more or less than three slots in three separate channels.Wouldn't it be less trace paths for mATX and above since you would have 3 instead of 4? You could still run 2 paths or less with itx and below albeit a small performance decrease. Either way you get the lower latency.
Perhaps software has mature some since x58 to take advantage of at least the tri channel, though maybe still not the quad channel of HEDT.
Depends on what you're trying to accomplish. If the last 1-2 fps doesn't matter, RAM counts might. I wouldn't buy a board with less than 4 slots (my one micro-server aside); can't put enough RAM in them for the future.at the end I was able to run 6000MHz no problem on my 2x16GB Samsung Corsair Dominator 5600MHz C36 using XMP and no other settings changed apart the ram frequency.
if I add two sticks more I goes down from 6GHz to 4.4GHz since I can't get 4.8GHz stable with 4 sticks.
How this can be possible?
From 6GHz stable with 1.25V RAM and 1.25SA to 4.4GHz?
don't buy 4 slots mobos, they are meaningless.
at the end I was able to run 6000MHz no problem on my 2x16GB Samsung Corsair Dominator 5600MHz C36 using XMP and no other settings changed apart the ram frequency.
if I add two sticks more I goes down from 6GHz to 4.4GHz since I can't get 4.8GHz stable with 4 sticks.
How this can be possible?
From 6GHz stable with 1.25V RAM and 1.25SA to 4.4GHz?
don't buy 4 slots mobos, they are meaningless.
Sounds like something is going on with that specific combination of hardware / firmware. However, while I have a couple of DDR5 motherboards and a couple 12900K's, I have but one set of DDR5 RAM for now. I seriously doubt you would have to drop below 4800MHz for four modules but that's speculative on my part.So you had to drop from 6000 to 4400 in order to go from 2 sticks to 4? Wow. I think that's more of a hit than anyone would have anticipated. Good to know. I wonder if there are voltages that can be tweaked to get higher than 4400 with 4 sticks or if you really just hit a wall?
So you had to drop from 6000 to 4400 in order to go from 2 sticks to 4? Wow. I think that's more of a hit than anyone would have anticipated. Good to know. I wonder if there are voltages that can be tweaked to get higher than 4400 with 4 sticks or if you really just hit a wall?
So, how'd you get the ddr5? Finally pay a scalper?Correct, from 2 sticks at 6GHz, I need to lower to 4.4GHz to get 4 sticks stable.
I have tried all the suggested voltages for big OC and 4.8GHz became a little bit more stable but it isn't 100% stable so I reverted back to 4.4GHz.
https://www.anandtech.com/show/16959/intel-innovation-alder-lake-november-4th/4Sounds like something is going on with that specific combination of hardware / firmware. However, while I have a couple of DDR5 motherboards and a couple 12900K's, I have but one set of DDR5 RAM for now. I seriously doubt you would have to drop below 4800MHz for four modules but that's speculative on my part.
Yeah, I hadn't looked into it all that deeply at the time I posted that initially. But looking at the tables, this makes sense now. I'd also point out that this is early hardware and that the IMC on Alder Lake-S are designed to support both DDR4 and DDR5. Even though you might be able to go higher, I wouldn't expect it on this early hardware.https://www.anandtech.com/show/16959/intel-innovation-alder-lake-november-4th/4
So officially Intel doesn't support it at higher speeds.
Doesn't mean a motherboard cannot go higher with better configuration through BIOS, but it isn't supported at higher rates and if a motherboard doesn't go higher, it is working as intended.