F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking An acceptable RAM latency for Ryzen is typically around 1-2 milliseconds.

An acceptable RAM latency for Ryzen is typically around 1-2 milliseconds.

An acceptable RAM latency for Ryzen is typically around 1-2 milliseconds.

J
J0ebyron
Member
225
03-16-2023, 01:12 PM
#1
What RAM latency works well for Ryzen?
J
J0ebyron
03-16-2023, 01:12 PM #1

What RAM latency works well for Ryzen?

B
bubalu529
Member
114
03-29-2023, 10:20 PM
#2
You can certainly improve the latency. Not always, but sometimes you have some wiggle room. My gskill kit is rated for 16-18-38 2T however I run it perfectly stable at 15-16-38 1T, with a 7700k system.
What are the stock timings for your RAM kit? Generally on ryzen or anything really, speeds are going to have a bigger impact on performance in the majority of applications. So try to get the timings as low as possible without sacrificing clock speeds, or just leave it stock.
You will likely need around 1.35v for stability at 3000mhz.
B
bubalu529
03-29-2023, 10:20 PM #2

You can certainly improve the latency. Not always, but sometimes you have some wiggle room. My gskill kit is rated for 16-18-38 2T however I run it perfectly stable at 15-16-38 1T, with a 7700k system.
What are the stock timings for your RAM kit? Generally on ryzen or anything really, speeds are going to have a bigger impact on performance in the majority of applications. So try to get the timings as low as possible without sacrificing clock speeds, or just leave it stock.
You will likely need around 1.35v for stability at 3000mhz.

A
Awesomeness666
Junior Member
11
03-30-2023, 06:07 PM
#3
To my understanding there is nothing you can do to improve CAS latency so I'm not quite sure what you are suggesting. The rule of thumb with CAS latency is lower is better.
A
Awesomeness666
03-30-2023, 06:07 PM #3

To my understanding there is nothing you can do to improve CAS latency so I'm not quite sure what you are suggesting. The rule of thumb with CAS latency is lower is better.

Z
Zogger38684
Junior Member
22
03-30-2023, 07:25 PM
#4
I might test the timing settings by adding 0.02 volts and attempt to operate at 2933.
Z
Zogger38684
03-30-2023, 07:25 PM #4

I might test the timing settings by adding 0.02 volts and attempt to operate at 2933.

T
58
04-01-2023, 04:43 AM
#5
You can certainly improve the latency. Not always, but sometimes you have some wiggle room. My gskill kit is rated for 16-18-38 2T however I run it perfectly stable at 15-16-38 1T, with a 7700k system.
What are the stock timings for your RAM kit? Generally on ryzen or anything really, speeds are going to have a bigger impact on performance in the majority of applications. So try to get the timings as low as possible without sacrificing clock speeds, or just leave it stock.
You will likely need around 1.35v for stability at 3000mhz.
T
TheKrazyKookie
04-01-2023, 04:43 AM #5

You can certainly improve the latency. Not always, but sometimes you have some wiggle room. My gskill kit is rated for 16-18-38 2T however I run it perfectly stable at 15-16-38 1T, with a 7700k system.
What are the stock timings for your RAM kit? Generally on ryzen or anything really, speeds are going to have a bigger impact on performance in the majority of applications. So try to get the timings as low as possible without sacrificing clock speeds, or just leave it stock.
You will likely need around 1.35v for stability at 3000mhz.