F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking Socket 1151 2133MHZ Ram?

Socket 1151 2133MHZ Ram?

Socket 1151 2133MHZ Ram?

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DarkcuT
Member
149
05-29-2016, 08:10 PM
#1
as i see most mobos they mention 64Gb, 4 x dimmr DDR4 3400(o.c.)/3333(o.c.)/3200(o.c.)/3100(o.c.)/3000(o.c.)/2933(o.c)/2800(o.c.)*/2666(o.c.)*/2400(o.c.)*/2133mhz non-ecc, un-buffered memory.
that means if i purchase ram with 2400mhz it would only read 2133 and i would need to configure how it works?
D
DarkcuT
05-29-2016, 08:10 PM #1

as i see most mobos they mention 64Gb, 4 x dimmr DDR4 3400(o.c.)/3333(o.c.)/3200(o.c.)/3100(o.c.)/3000(o.c.)/2933(o.c)/2800(o.c.)*/2666(o.c.)*/2400(o.c.)*/2133mhz non-ecc, un-buffered memory.
that means if i purchase ram with 2400mhz it would only read 2133 and i would need to configure how it works?

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zP3DRO_1
Member
118
05-29-2016, 10:46 PM
#2
2133 is the standard speed. All quicker DDR4 memory will apply XMP settings just like DDR3 does.
You can choose any speed memory for your motherboards that match the compatible list, then enable XMP in the BIOS, save and exit, and the memory will handle it automatically. Very straightforward.
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zP3DRO_1
05-29-2016, 10:46 PM #2

2133 is the standard speed. All quicker DDR4 memory will apply XMP settings just like DDR3 does.
You can choose any speed memory for your motherboards that match the compatible list, then enable XMP in the BIOS, save and exit, and the memory will handle it automatically. Very straightforward.

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ExtasyFox
Member
177
05-29-2016, 11:30 PM
#3
2133 is the standard speed. All quicker DDR4 memory will apply XMP settings just like DDR3 does.
You can choose any speed memory for your motherboards that match the compatible list, then enable XMP in the BIOS, save and exit, and the memory will handle it automatically. Very straightforward.
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ExtasyFox
05-29-2016, 11:30 PM #3

2133 is the standard speed. All quicker DDR4 memory will apply XMP settings just like DDR3 does.
You can choose any speed memory for your motherboards that match the compatible list, then enable XMP in the BIOS, save and exit, and the memory will handle it automatically. Very straightforward.