Comparing dual rank RAM sticks to four single rank options highlights different performance characteristics.
Comparing dual rank RAM sticks to four single rank options highlights different performance characteristics.
Hey everyone, I'm trying to understand this more clearly now that it's been a hot topic lately. I need RAM for my new build and am figuring out what options are best. Recent videos from HU and GN have mentioned that using four sticks is superior to two, mainly because you're running at dual rank. I've always thought two sticks are better than four since they're simpler to synchronize. My question is: when comparing a set of two dual-rank sticks versus a set of four single-rank sticks (or two sets of two single sticks), which configuration will give better performance? If you can share more details, it would help. I'm considering the Crucial Ballistix RGB at 3600MHz CL16 and the G.Skill Trident Z Neo RGB at the same speed. The Trident Z has slightly slower timings but is more affordable. From a design perspective, I really like the look of four Crucial sticks with two Trident Z sets, so if performance matters more, that might influence my choice.
Discussing LEDs is accurate. Regarding RAM speed, on an X570 or a high-end B550 board, achieving faster speeds is straightforward.
Sure, I didn't consider the timing aspect. Actually, I was thinking about clock speeds and settings. I'm running an ASRock B550 Steel Legend, so it should work just fine unless it complicates things unnecessarily.
Indicates the count of memory banks within a module. https://uk.crucial.com/support/articles-...emory-rank
It should work either way; pick the more affordable option. A 2x dual or 4x single configuration gives full 256-bit width. Typically, 16 gigabit sticks are dual-rank while 4-8GB sticks are single-rank. Syncing likely means they won't run at identical speeds. For a Ryzen 5000, a 4-stick setup shouldn't cause any problems.
256 bit requires a quad-channel setup exclusively, nothing else works. Rank configurations don’t affect channel settings. The organization of ranks has minimal impact on performance. To my knowledge, affordable quad-channel support is only available with Threadripper.