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G.SKILL Announces DDR4 3600 MHz CL15 16 GB Low Latency Memory Kit

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G.SKILL International Enterprise Co., Ltd., the world's leading manufacturer of extreme performance memory and gaming peripherals, is announcing a new DDR4 memory kit at DDR4 3600 MHz CL15-15-15-35 1.35V under its legendary Trident Z flagship series! This memory kit will be made available in 8 GBx2 configuration for a total of 16 GB, making this Trident Z kit an essential part of any high performance system builds.

High Performance, High Efficiency
Utilizing specially selected high performance memory components, G.SKILL has continued to improve upon the specifications of DDR4 to maintain a latency of CL15 at 3600 MHz, a high frequency that typically could only be achieved with slower latencies. Designed with XMP 2.0 profiles, achieving a highly efficient system is now easier than ever. A stress testing screenshot of the high efficiency memory kit with ASUS Z170-DELUXE motherboard and Intel Core i5 6600K processor can be found below.

Worldwide Availability
The Trident Z DDR4 3600 MHz CL15 16 GB (8 GBx2) memory kit will be available via authorized G.SKILL worldwide distribution partners at the end of April 2016.



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Nice to see cas to mhz ratios finally approaching high end ddr3 levels.
 
I'm still waiting for DDR5 5000MHz CL15 :D
 
Just sell me the heatsink :)
 
Nice to see cas to mhz ratios finally approaching high end ddr3 levels.
I'm not 100% sure, but there should be no DDR3 kits running at 3600 factory speeds.
 
I'm not 100% sure, but there should be no DDR3 kits running at 3600 factory speeds.
I think he's talking about the ratio between them.
 
High bandwidth memory is nice, but latency doesn't matter all that much for normal desktop usage.
 
High bandwidth memory is nice, but latency doesn't matter all that much for normal desktop usage.

Neithes does bandwidth.

I wonder how Iris Pro is affected by bandwith...
 
Jesus this memory kit is yummy!
 
Give me 128GB DDR4-3200 with 15-15-15 timing and I am sold.
 
does not mention x99 platform.... Mmmm
 
Give me 128GB DDR4-3200 with 15-15-15 timing and I am sold.

You're looking at 16-16-16-36... is that good enough? :p

does not mention x99 platform.... Mmmm
Simply because the CPUs that go into X99 motherboards aren't capable.

High bandwidth memory is nice, but latency doesn't matter all that much for normal desktop usage.

I feel it's kind of the other way around...bandwidth is plenty, so it's truly the latency, by definition of what latency is (a delay before things happen), that matters.
 
I feel it's kind of the other way around...bandwidth is plenty, so it's truly the latency, by definition of what latency is (a delay before things happen), that matters.
It should be implied from this thread, but I was talking specifically about memory latency. Thanks to the cache and prefetching in later CPU generations memory latency is pretty much a non-issue except for specialized workloads.

If you are thinking of latency between a keypress and a rendered frame displayed on a screen, then that is completely unrelated to memory latency.
 
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