Review: G.Skill Ripjaws V 8GB DDR4-3600 (F4-3600C17D-8GVK)

by Tarinder Sandhu on 20 January 2016, 16:11

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Conclusion

Ultra-fast DDR4 is perhaps useful in niche scenarios where the enthusiast is pushing all components to their limits and wants bleeding-edge performance.

The drive behind DDR4 memory has taken on renewed importance since the launch of Intel's Skylake platform. Able to operate DDR4 memory at high speeds and now available in volume, Skylake is the desktop and mobile catalyst that will provide considerable inertia to the adoption of faster, better memory technology.

Taiwanese memory manufacturer G.Skill is hoping the above statement rings true because it is going after DDR4 in a big way. The Ripjaws V line stretches from a very generic 2,133MHz to 4,000MHz, almost covering the entire spectrum of what is currently available.

Higher speeds are alluring to the enthusiast, so it's no surprise to see G.Skill ply the channel with 3,600MHz kits presented in a dual-module pack.

The application-performance reality is often at odds with the sheer bandwidth on offer because the processor's on-chip cache mitigates most of the benefit. Ultra-fast DDR4 is perhaps useful in niche scenarios where the enthusiast is pushing all components to their limits and wants bleeding-edge performance.

If that's you and there's plentiful budget for the next build, the G.Skill Ripjaws V line offers a wide selection of proven memory, headlined by some tasty speeds and feeds. You'll pay double for the privilege of 3,600MHz memory over, say JEDEC-approved 2,133MHz speeds, but the sheer financial chasm isn't anywhere near as pronounced as it was just four months ago.

 

The Good
 
The Bad
Impressive speeds
Well-built modules
Available at up to 4,000MHz
 
Niche appeal
2x price of generic 2,133MHz



G.Skill Ripjaws V 8GB DDR4-3600
(F4-3600C17D-8GVK)

HEXUS.where2buy

The G.Skill F4-3600C17D-8GVK memory kit is available to purchase from Newegg.

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we don't imagine anyone investing in expensive RAM would necessarily be running an IGP for graphics duties.

On an intel platform, maybe not. I know it's banging the gong somewhat, but I'll be very interested to see what AMD's IGPs can do when they finally get their mainstream platform onto DDR4… :)