Review: G.Skill TridentX DDR3-2,400 Ivy Bridge memory

by Tarinder Sandhu on 2 May 2012, 15:30 3.0

Tags: G skill

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Final thoughts and rating

Now available to buy from your favourite retailer, Intel's 3rd Generation Core chips are sure to attract the interest of the enthusiast. The chips' release is also an opportune time for memory manufacturers to launch optimised dual-channel kits, and G.Skill has done just this with the all-new TridentX DDR3 range.

Starting at a lofty 2,400MHz and reaching 2,800MHz the TridentX family looks good on paper. Delve a little deeper and the loose timings and 1.65V operating juice - both necessary evils at this end of the spectrum - rear their ugly heads, as does pricing, which is reckoned to be at least double that of regular DDR3 memory that runs at 1,600MHz.

Genuinely high-end products are released with the lure of exceptional performance. Our benchmarks show an 8GB (2 x 4GB) TridentX pack of DDR3-2,400 memory to be barely any faster, if at all, than well-tuned DDR3-1,600 memory. The explanation for what seems like a performance anomaly is actually quite simple: Intel's recent chips integrate smart, efficient caches that blunt the hoped-for benefits of running premium RAM.

The G.Skill TridentX 8GB DDR3-2,400 memory pack does exactly what it says on the tin, with utter stability, but the very architecture of the latest Intel processors does it no favours, especially as it costs over twice as much as memory that performs just as well. We're struggling to find compelling, obvious reasons for recommending it, frankly.

The Good

Works flawlessly, easy to setup (XMP 1.3)

The Bad

Costs over twice as much as quality DDR3-1,600 memory
Shows little real-world benefit over cheaper RAM

HEXUS Rating


G.Skill TridentX F3-2400C10D-8GTX memory

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The reviewed memory can be purchased from here.

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At HEXUS, we invite the companies whose products we test to comment on our articles. If any company representatives for the products reviewed choose to respond, we'll publish their commentary here verbatim.



HEXUS Forums :: 6 Comments

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Ah, would have been nice to see the 2.8GHz kit in action.
Shows little real-world benefit over cheaper RAM

This is a pretty damning indictment and one that surely doesn't make it worthy of 3 stars?
miniyazz
This is a pretty damning indictment and one that surely doesn't make it worthy of 3 stars?

There's marginal gain over 1600MHz in the 3DMark11 test as well, that's the market they'd be aiming for with these as well.
you can just buy cheap 1600mhz ram and OC to 1866 at stock timings and it will perform better than this sloppy overpriced rubbish
very good review. My question here is, what ddr3 1600mhz freq with XMP 1.3 would you recommend for my Asus Z77 Deluxe panther point motherboard ?