Yes, we can determine the transition from DDR3 to DDR4.
Yes, we can determine the transition from DDR3 to DDR4.
This method essentially determines RAM latency. https://notkyon.moe/ram-latency.htm A lower value means better performance (higher numbers indicate better).
It's different because each type works at a specific frequency. DDR3 runs at 1600MHz, while the combination you mentioned adjusts to 800MHz and then doubles it back to 1600MHz.
The tool appears to align with the concept: DDR3-1600MHz CL8 equals 10 DDR4-3200MHz CL16, and DDR3-1866MHz CL8 equals 8.5 with DDR4-3733MHz CL16 also at 8.5. Still, I believe both hardware and software influence performance. For example, if a Ryzen used DDR4-1866MHz CL8, the architecture might favor MHz values, suggesting a better result from a 3733MHz CL16. Conversely, Intel chips might prefer lower latency options like 1866MHz, similar to other programs that value bandwidth.