Pues las memorias que corran lo mas cercano a 3200MHz, que sean modulos con chips de memoria Samsung preferentemente y en Single Bank, asi que descartas SI-o-SI esas memorias que has elegido. RyZEN depende mucho de la velocidad de las memorias para su bus interno, asi que entyre mas rapida la RAM mas ancho de banda en el procesador, entre otras cosas.
En el hilo de ZEN puse un post de redit donde estan reportando el listado de modulos que personas que tienen su equipo RyZEN y reportan las que tienen estos chips de samsung y en single bank, que es la configuracion que mas estable se esta comportando.
viewtopic.php?p=1743662961Instala los ultimos controladores de Chipset que ha sacado AMD, los cuales mejoran el rendimiento global del sistema.
Aqui un informe del comportamiento de RyZEN con diferentes velocidades en el modulo de memoria que usen.
Aqui otro. Todos los procesadores RyZEN R7, R5 y R3 usan el mismo modulo CCX [4 nucleos, su bus de datos, etc.], asi que aunquer se refiera al R7 se puede trasladar estas conclusiones y resultados al resto de procesadores R5 y R3.
http://www.guru3d.com/articles-pages/am ... ew,10.htmlConclusionRyzen is memory frequency dependant, it is hungry for bandwidth and lower latency, but that's not the all saying conclusion. It is the accumulation of multiple and many factors that is going to drive up Ryzen performance. As stated,
we can gain 30% performance on a Ryzen 7 1700 by tweaking the processor and using 3200 MHz memory. In gaming that number will obviously differ, but it all surely helps. This article is not meant to be seen as comparative towards Intel processor, but more as a 'how can I gain perf' read. I mean I mentioned it in the review many times, everything is relative and the relative fact is that the right Intel processors can overclock even higher. Short term, I still feel that for a pure gaming platform right now a quad-core Core i7 7700K will offer the better performance if paired with a super fast and expensive graphics card, but only then and only at 1080p. However long term - week after week after week we see Ryzen performance increasing and you jumped from four to eight cores with Ryzen 7. The perf increases happen in small steps and whether that is from BIOS updates, game engine optimizations, changes in memory frequency and/or overclocks, it all adds up bit by bit. As such Ryzen 7 1080p game performance is on the Ryze (pardon the pun) as well. Long term thinking, with say a Ryzen 7 1700 processor you are looking at a fantastic threading 8-core processor with leading desktop application performance at a fantastic price for the platform (mobo/proc). However imho the memory cannot and may not be too expensive. Take my advice, 2667 or 2933 MHz seems to be a sweets-spot and CL 15 or 16 is fine as well.
Right, back to the Flare X memory. Sorry G.Skill, this was supposed to be a review for you guys
The Flare X memory rocks. With our ASRock motherboard we seated the memory, in the BIOS we enabled XMP and it was done. We got instant properly configured timings, frequency and DDR4 voltage. That is testimony to what we want to see. I am sure this memory will not do the sexy XMP thing on all motherboards out there just yet as firmware updates need to be applied. If that happens to you, just insert the settings manually in the BIOS. But I bet that 9 out of 10 motherboards will support this memory as G.Skill is making sure of that cross-brand compatibility by seeding the motherboard manufacturers this type of memory. The price for 16GB 3200 MHz CL14 I find to be steep at that 215 Euro/USD marker, again you could settle for something like 2667/2933 MHz with CL15 or C16 as well. But the Flare X memory itself does what it promises, it is highly compatible and stable and as such comes recommended by Guru3D.com.