Tuesday, January 6th 2015

Crucial Introduces New Ballistix Sport and Tactical DDR4 Gaming Memory

Crucial, a leading global brand of memory and storage upgrades, today announced new Crucial Ballistix Sport LT DDR4 memory and new Ballistix Tactical DDR4 memory. The new modules offer a combination of sleek design, DDR4 performance, and proven reliability for gamers to own the competition.

Designed for mainstream users who simply want to get more performance out of their systems, Ballistix Sport LT DDR4 memory delivers fast speeds and increased bandwidth. A new addition to the current Ballistix Sport DDR4 lineup, Sport LT modules feature a covert digital camo design and integrated heat spreader. Whether gamers want plug-and-play installation or Intel XMP 2.0 profiles to achieve DDR4 speeds of 2400 MT/s, Ballistix Sport LT memory delivers seamless, affordable performance.
Crucial Ballistix Tactical DDR4 Gaming Memory
Designed to take gaming to the next level, Ballistix Tactical DDR4 memory delivers 2666 MT/s speeds and offers increased bandwidths of 21.3 GB/s. The modules feature distinctive heat spreaders, a complementary black PCB, and certified Intel XMP 2.0 profiles for easy setup and configuration. The new modules also support four channel memory architecture that maximises data rates to help gamers strike faster than their opponents.

"With our new Ballistix DDR4 offerings, we continue our commitment to giving gamers, enthusiasts, and overclockers the latest memory products needed to keep their systems on the cutting edge," said Jeremy Mortensen, product marketing manager, Crucial. "Our Ballistix Sport LT and Tactical DDR4 memory offers a great combination of performance, style, and reliability that gamers have come to expect from Crucial."

Ballistix Sport LT and Ballistix Tactical DDR4 modules will be available in Q1 2015 at Crucial.com and through select global partners in 4GB and 8GB densities, as well as kits up to 32GB.
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3 Comments on Crucial Introduces New Ballistix Sport and Tactical DDR4 Gaming Memory

#1
Schmuckley
Welp..There's a good chance they're not Hynix MFR/CFR ICs anyway :D
At least Crucial makes their own ICs.
Do you have a link with the timings and such?
Posted on Reply
#2
Jorge
SchmuckleyWelp..There's a good chance they're not Hynix MFR/CFR ICs anyway :D
At least Crucial makes their own ICs.
Do you have a link with the timings and such?
Timings on DDR3 and DDR4 make virtually no tangible system performance difference once the RAM frequency is above 1600 MHz. as the DRAM is no longer a system bottleneck. Timings make even less diff than frequency increases which do not make a tangible diff on discrete desktop CPU powered systems using 1600 MHz. or higher RAM frequency or ~2133 MHz. on APU powered desktops.

This has all been documented with real software. The DRAM benches show theoretical performance or performance potential if the CPU/APU was able to provide much greater data flow, which it can't.
Posted on Reply
#3
Schmuckley
^ I'll keep that in mind :rolleyes:.
You might as well go get you some ddr3 1333 CAS9,overclock it to 1600 and call it good.

Since timings don't make a difference,why not CAS11 @ 1600Mhz? :laugh:
Posted on Reply
Apr 27th, 2024 07:41 EDT change timezone

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