F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop No, 3200 CL22 Sodimm does not run at the highest speed out of the box for Intel chips.

No, 3200 CL22 Sodimm does not run at the highest speed out of the box for Intel chips.

No, 3200 CL22 Sodimm does not run at the highest speed out of the box for Intel chips.

E
el_flo
Member
61
08-11-2016, 10:46 AM
#1
I am planning to upgrade my ram from 16gb to 32gb (my laptop is Gigabyte G5 KC). I found some cases that DDR4 has problem with AMD chip (with no XMP support), and only run at 2133 or 2400, I am not sure in case of Intel (my 10500H only support up to 2933). Do I need to choose a specific kit of ram to be able to run at 2933, or any types of 3200 CL22 will work? I understand that it is easier to test directly from the store, but 3200 ram is scarce in my city so I need to order from other provinces, so I want to make sure before ordering. Thanks for reading!
E
el_flo
08-11-2016, 10:46 AM #1

I am planning to upgrade my ram from 16gb to 32gb (my laptop is Gigabyte G5 KC). I found some cases that DDR4 has problem with AMD chip (with no XMP support), and only run at 2133 or 2400, I am not sure in case of Intel (my 10500H only support up to 2933). Do I need to choose a specific kit of ram to be able to run at 2933, or any types of 3200 CL22 will work? I understand that it is easier to test directly from the store, but 3200 ram is scarce in my city so I need to order from other provinces, so I want to make sure before ordering. Thanks for reading!

B
bishopboys68
Posting Freak
899
08-12-2016, 10:04 PM
#2
The laptop's BIOS determines whether it can handle XMP or DOCP features. Check both the RAM speed support and the BIOS settings for enabling these protocols. A 3200 CL22 board usually runs at 3200 MHz natively without XMP, but confirm it matches the JEDEC clock standard for that specific unit. It should be downclocked to around 2933 as per typical behavior.
B
bishopboys68
08-12-2016, 10:04 PM #2

The laptop's BIOS determines whether it can handle XMP or DOCP features. Check both the RAM speed support and the BIOS settings for enabling these protocols. A 3200 CL22 board usually runs at 3200 MHz natively without XMP, but confirm it matches the JEDEC clock standard for that specific unit. It should be downclocked to around 2933 as per typical behavior.

W
wtapin
Member
149
08-13-2016, 12:03 AM
#3
It relies on the BIOS configuration and whether XMP adjustments are permitted. Their documentation mentions a standard of 3200MHz, but it won’t auto-set; you’ll need to modify the BIOS to at least 2933MHz if changes are allowed.
W
wtapin
08-13-2016, 12:03 AM #3

It relies on the BIOS configuration and whether XMP adjustments are permitted. Their documentation mentions a standard of 3200MHz, but it won’t auto-set; you’ll need to modify the BIOS to at least 2933MHz if changes are allowed.

P
Poketerp
Member
132
08-15-2016, 08:45 PM
#4
Thank you for the update. Your plan sounds reasonable—confirming the Jedec clock setting to 3200 should align with your laptop's requirements.
P
Poketerp
08-15-2016, 08:45 PM #4

Thank you for the update. Your plan sounds reasonable—confirming the Jedec clock setting to 3200 should align with your laptop's requirements.

L
Lover_Girl
Member
197
08-16-2016, 10:11 AM
#5
It seems your CPU’s memory controller can’t handle anything beyond 2933 MHz. That makes a 3200 CL22 kit less appealing unless you’re willing to search for alternatives. Are there any kits with a JEDEC clock at that frequency available?
L
Lover_Girl
08-16-2016, 10:11 AM #5

It seems your CPU’s memory controller can’t handle anything beyond 2933 MHz. That makes a 3200 CL22 kit less appealing unless you’re willing to search for alternatives. Are there any kits with a JEDEC clock at that frequency available?

M
Masupa
Member
59
08-16-2016, 02:06 PM
#6
I think most DDR4 RAM models are shown as 2133, 2400, 2666 and 3200. I haven’t noticed any listings for 2933, and my current stock includes a 3200.
M
Masupa
08-16-2016, 02:06 PM #6

I think most DDR4 RAM models are shown as 2133, 2400, 2666 and 3200. I haven’t noticed any listings for 2933, and my current stock includes a 3200.

A
Ametera
Member
62
08-24-2016, 01:07 PM
#7
most SODIMM DDR4 models bypassed the 2933 frequency, yet the CPU still operates at that speed. No clear evidence shows major differences in performance across benchmarks. Kingston appears to be a reliable choice, while Corsair, GSKill, and Kingstong all seem to deliver similar results with 3200MHz kits.
A
Ametera
08-24-2016, 01:07 PM #7

most SODIMM DDR4 models bypassed the 2933 frequency, yet the CPU still operates at that speed. No clear evidence shows major differences in performance across benchmarks. Kingston appears to be a reliable choice, while Corsair, GSKill, and Kingstong all seem to deliver similar results with 3200MHz kits.