G.Skill on Tuesday introduced its ultra-low-latency DDR5-6400 memory modules that feature a CAS latency of 30 clocks, which appears to be the industry's most aggressive timings yet for DDR5-6400 sticks. The modules will be available for both AMD and Intel CPU-based systems.

With every new generation of DDR memory comes an increase in data transfer rates and an extension of relative latencies. While for the vast majority of applications, the increased bandwidth offsets the performance impact of higher timings, there are applications that favor low latencies. However, shrinking latencies is sometimes harder than increasing data transfer rates, which is why low-latency modules are rare.

Nonetheless, G.Skill has apparently managed to cherry-pick enough DDR5 memory chips and build appropriate printed circuit boards to produce DDR5-6400 modules with CL30 timings, which are substantially lower than the CL46 timings recommended by JEDEC for this speed bin. This means that while JEDEC-standard modules have an absolute latency of 14.375 ns, G.Skill's modules can boast a latency of just 9.375 ns – an approximately 35% decrease.

G.Skill's DDR5-6400 CL30 39-39-102 modules have a capacity of 16 GB and will be available in 32 GB dual-channel kits, though the company does not disclose voltages, which are likely considerably higher than those standardized by JEDEC.

The company plans to make its DDR5-6400 modules available both for AMD systems with EXPO profiles (Trident Z5 Neo RGB and Trident Z5 Royal Neo) and for Intel-powered PCs with XMP 3.0 profiles (Trident Z5 RGB and Trident Z5 Royal). For AMD AM5 systems that have a practical limitation of 6000 MT/s – 6400 MT/s for DDR5 memory (as this is roughly as fast as AMD's Infinity Fabric can operate at with a 1:1 ratio), the new modules will be particularly beneficial for AMD's Ryzen 7000 and Ryzen 9000-series processors.

G.Skill notes that since its modules are non-standard, they will not work with all systems but will operate on high-end motherboards with properly cooled CPUs.

The new ultra-low-latency memory kits will be available worldwide from G.Skill's partners starting in late August 2024. The company did not disclose the pricing of these modules, but since we are talking about premium products that boast unique specifications, they are likely to be priced accordingly.

Source: G.Skill

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  • jerrylzy - Wednesday, August 14, 2024 - link

    Minor correction needed: "as this is roughly as fast as AMD's Infinity Fabric can operate at with a 1:1 ratio"

    This isn't true because memory speed is only related to Zen 4/5's memory controller (UCLK) on the IO die, not the infinity fabric (FCLK). The infinity fabric is even slower which usually runs at 2000MHz. AMD said the preferred ratio of FCLK:UCLK is 1:1 which happens in the so-called 1:2 mode (1 UCLK : MCLK 2) at 8000MT/s. The second best option is to run FCLK:UCLK at 3:2 which is 2000 MHz : 3000 MHz or 2133 MHz : 3200 MHz. This is where the sweetspot of 2000 MHz FCLK and 6000 MT/s came from. If you have a 6400 MT/s memory, you should run your FCLK at 2133 MHz if your CPU can handle it.
  • FatFlatulentGit - Friday, August 16, 2024 - link

    "...a CAS latency of 30 clocks, which appears to be the industry's most aggressive timings yet for DDR5-6400 sticks."

    Mushkin has been selling DD5 6400 sticks with 30-37-37-96 timings for a while. Now if G.Skill is doing this at less than the 1.4v used by Mushkin then it might be notable.

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