RAM 32 GB Corsair Vengence, 3600 speed,cheap price,more GBs
The reason for the choices is that Sammy B has the best (sub)timings of all the DDR4 memory chips by a mile, though I would personally repeat my recommendations from another thread;
with a relatively cheap, if more expensive THESE DAYS Patriot Viper Steel kit
And a faster Team Group bin that's slightly more expensive. (but still much cheaper than the gskill kit in the article)
With what the Viper Steel sticks go for these days, you can grab the 3200 CL14 G.Skill sticks if they're the same price; as I myself am using those and gotten
perfectly good results with them.
If you want a
higher-end option than more-or-less-the-same grade of b-die, then you should rather be looking at non-RGB* sticks of dual-rank b-die;
pcpartpicker.com
Such as this 3200 CL14-14-14 2x16 GB kit, though it's a bit harder to find consistent Sammy B dual-rank sticks, as the
Code:
(Frequency / tRCDRD) >= 200
rule doesn't always appear due to dual-rank b-die potentially being a little temperamental.
A dual-rank b-die kit will have a slight (I can't tell for sure, as I have not tested it myself due to price
)
performance advantage over single-rank sticks, while the dual-rank frequency penalty doesn't really matter as you're still capped by FCLK.
* RGB is a detrimental element for signal integrity, which dual-rank sticks already have a bit of a problem with
The
reason that you would shoot for Sammy B memory is because memory is by far the biggest bottleneck for Zen 2 performance - and you're stuck at 3666-3800 MT/s due to your FCLK capping out at 1833-1900 MHz, seemingly depending on power quality (cleanness).
Which means that memory types such as
Micron E that can easily clock up past 4200 MT/s, but suck at subtimings, find themselves getting stomped if you're after
serious performance rather than Pretty Good.
Not to mention, that in my experience squeezing every penny out of my 3200 CL14 kit -
Ryzen DRAM Calculator uses
very safe Samsung B-Die settings, thus you're unlikely to have any problems whacking them in - all while getting 90% of the total benefits for 10% of the effort. It's a great deal - and Zen 3 will still be on DDR4, so your investment into speedy memory will last.
I'm also not certain
how much better dual-rank BAD-die will perform, given that they're likely to have different subtiming walls than single-rank - but seeing that DRAM calculator doesn't really spit out settings
too different between the two, and seeing that I would recommend that you'd at least use those, it shouldn't really matter.
Now, none of this really matters if you're for some reason stuck in 60 Hz land - but even
LG's OLED TVs with great input latency are putting out 120 Hz these days, and if you're really out for a Visually Pleasant experience; they're the best place to go these days, especially seeing that models from 2019 and onwards undo burn-in during standby.
oh and of course, if you're shooting for 240 Hz madness - RAM overclocking is mandatory for a proper experience