In the SuperPi 32M, the Vengeance modules benefit from their relatively tight tRCD and tRP timings, so that the DDR4 config can also be caught up with here with manual overclocking.
New today is the PyPrime 2.0 benchmark, which has only been around for a relatively short time and was developed specifically for competitive benchmarking of RAM. Latency is even more important here than in the SuperPi, and clear differences can be seen even with only a few seconds of total benchmark time with preset 2B. The smallest changes in subtimings are noticeable here and the run-to-run variance amounts to less than 0.01 seconds. A perfect new addition for our RAM tests, especially since DDR5 cannot yet keep up with DDR4.
Due to time constraints, we cannot put all the DDR5 kits tested so far through the new benchmarks, but at least the slowest and fastest DDR5 kit in each case and the DDR4 comparison config are available for reference. Between Patriot’s DDR5 JEDEC modules and the optimized DDR4 setup, there is a whopping 66% difference here, with an advantage for DDR4, and that despite the fact that it “clocks 25% slower”, as you might read in some DDR5 marketing material.
The Corsair Vengance modules still manage well under the 9 second mark with manual optimization, which is respectable, but not an absolute top rate, as in the other benchmarks. In XMP mode, they are only about 1/3 second behind the G.Skill Trident Z5 modules, which is really respectable for “out of the box” performance.
Also new in our test is the 3DMark Timespy CPU score. The benchmark software has been around for a few years, but it has established itself as a popular indicator of gaming performance for – well, gamers. A mix of latency and bandwidth is relevant here again, with a slight preference for the latter. Here, the Vengeance RGB sticks again make a good impression and can take the lead with manual tuning.
- 1 - Unboxing and Design
- 2 - Dimensions and RGB lighting
- 3 - Heatsink test and SPD information
- 4 - Teardown and PCB analysis
- 5 - Overclocking and test systems
- 6 - Synthetics (1/2) – Linpack Xtreme, AIDA64, Geekbench 3
- 7 - Synthetics (2/2) – SuperPI 32M, Pyprime 2.0 2B, Timespy CPU
- 8 - Gaming QHD and FHD – ACC, SoTR, CS:GO
- 9 - Zusammenfassung und Fazit
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