Friday, May 23rd 2025

Neo Forza Brings CAMM2 and CKD OC Memory to Computex 2025

Neo Forza brought its latest memory and storage products to the 2025 Computex. We begin our tour with the company's latest CAMM2 and LPCAMM2 modules. These are dual-channel DDR5 memory compacted into a single module that's intended to be installed along the plane of the motherboard, to minimize Z-Height. The company's CAMM2 and LPCAMM2 modules come in 16 GB, 24 GB, 32 GB, 48 GB, and 64 GB densities, with speeds ranging from DDR5-5600 to DDR5-7500 and LPDDR5-7500 (in case of LPCAMM2), with CAS latencies ranging from 46T to 52T, and DRAM voltages as low as 1.1 V for the CAMM2, and 0.5 V to 1.05 V for the LPCAMM2.

The company's DDR5 Standard series UDIMMs and SO-DIMMs target the entry level of the market, with speeds of DDR5-5600, and module densities ranging from 8 GB to 64 GB (dual-rank), CAS latencies from 40T to 46T; and DRAM voltages of 1.1 V. Neo Forza is also ready with its first DDR5 CUDIMMs and CSODIMMs that implement client clock-drivers (CKD)s. Its Standard series CKD modules offer densities ranging from 8 GB to 64 GB, with speeds of DDR5-6400, CL52, and 1.1 V module voltage.
Neo Forza's DDR5 OC UDIMM lineup comes in speeds ranging from DDR5-5600 to DDR5-8200, with tight timings of CL30 to CL40; and module voltage ranging from 1.1 V to 1.5 V. Winding things up are the company's overclocking focused DDR4 memory for those still on older platforms such as AM4, and the PSSD-M1, a portable SSD measuring 70 mm x 62 mm x 8.2 mm, with capacities ranging from 500 GB to 4 TB, implementing a 20 Gbps USB 3.2 Gen 2 x2, and offering speeds as high as 2 GB/s. The drive is compatible with Apple MagSafe.
Add your own comment

5 Comments on Neo Forza Brings CAMM2 and CKD OC Memory to Computex 2025

#1
AGlezB
The overclockers I know fall in two groups:
  1. Those pushing the limit of the newest tech.
  2. Those pushing the limits of very old, very obsolete tech, i.e. make a 90s potato run Crysis maxed at 500fps.
I don't know a single one interested in "previous" gen tech.



My lack of knowledge doesn't mean they don't exist, right? Right?
I've been trying to find ways to not call this stupid so I'd appreciate if someone can point out what I'm missing. Unless, of course, they plan to sell them at a price so low normal users will consider buying them instead of just looking at the "overclocking" label and passing them on in favor of more "normal" RAM.
Posted on Reply
#2
PixelTech
Woowzer that LPCAMM2 is CL17! :eek: Getting back to DDR4 low latency.
Posted on Reply
#3
Tea_n_Crumpets
hoping that 7500-CL17 LPCAMM2 module is a sign of upgradable RAM eventually being able to compete with the soldered memory on things like the Ryzen AI 300 Series and Apple Silicon...

Probably not, but hey, one can dream!
Posted on Reply
#4
wickerman
AGlezBThe overclockers I know fall in two groups:
  1. Those pushing the limit of the newest tech.
  2. Those pushing the limits of very old, very obsolete tech, i.e. make a 90s potato run Crysis maxed at 500fps.
I don't know a single one interested in "previous" gen tech.
It is certainly odd timing to launch some fancy DDR4. DDR4 isnt dead by any means, intel's 14th gen still supported DDR4 (everything core ultra is DDR5 only i believe?) and AMD seems to be happy keeping AM4 alive with new chips launched as recently as January. So theres certainly demand for some new DDR4 but high end premium stuff makes little sense. I guess a bit of speed binning isnt that expensive to do and it might be worth a few small runs at the factory.
Posted on Reply
#5
AGlezB
wickermanIt is certainly odd timing to launch some fancy DDR4. DDR4 isnt dead by any means, intel's 14th gen still supported DDR4 (everything core ultra is DDR5 only i believe?) and AMD seems to be happy keeping AM4 alive with new chips launched as recently as January. So theres certainly demand for some new DDR4 but high end premium stuff makes little sense. I guess a bit of speed binning isnt that expensive to do and it might be worth a few small runs at the factory.
Yup, DDR4 is alive and kicking and high quality hardware at competitive prices is always welcome.

Focusing their marketing on "overclocking" is what I don't get. If they manage to consistently outperform the current overclocking champion brands they will make a wave even if they're doing it on older tech but the chances of that happening are slim at best, IMO.
Posted on Reply
May 28th, 2025 09:49 CDT change timezone

New Forum Posts

Popular Reviews

Controversial News Posts