G.SKILL launches a new pair of DDR5 memory Timing variants Features the lowest master timing set released by a DRAM manufacturer since DDR5 was first introduced. Qiji’s Trident Z5 Neo RGB, M5 RGB Neo and Z5 Royal Neo series are now available in DDR5-6000 CL26-36-36-96 configurations in 32GB and 64GB kits and in CL28-36-36-96 configurations in 48GB and 96GB kits.
The CL26-36-36-96 configuration is G.Skill’s most compact configuration currently. According to G.Skill, the 64GB (2x32GB) model is the world’s first 64GB kit to achieve such tight timings on DDR5. G.Skill demonstrated that the kit works completely stably in MemtestPro 4.0 on Ryzen 9 9900X and Asus Crosshair X870E Hero.
G.Skill also shared the same test, showing a higher-capacity 96GB CL-28-36-36-96 configuration with the same CPU and RAM, which performed an error-free run of MemtestPro 4.0.
These kits are aimed at gamers and power users who want the best timing at 6000MT/s DDR5 memory frequencies. G.Skill says these new kits are built for “select” X870E motherboards Ryzen 9000 The “optimal operating frequency” of the manual series CPU is 6000MHz, and the structure clock, memory clock and memory controller clock can operate at an ideal frequency ratio. However, as long as Intel users are willing to enter overclocked memory profiles, there’s nothing stopping them from using these kits. These kits only expo memory support, and does not have Intel XMP profiles (as far as we know).
There’s also nothing stopping Ryzen 7000 users on motherboards with 800 or 600 series chipsets from using these memory kits. However, users must pay more attention to system stability and ensure that the package does not cause problems when the system is functioning properly.
Pricing has not yet been disclosed, but it’s easy to guess that these new kits may be among the most expensive DDR5-6000 kits on the market because of their tight timing. Timing can significantly change DDR5 pricing, with a DDR5-6000 CL 28 2x16GB kit costing $120 to $130. By comparison, a CL30 kit with the same configuration costs less than $80.