Computex 2022: TeamGroup Announces T-Force Delta RGB DDR5-6600 CL34 and DDR5-6000 CL30 Memory
by Gavin Bonshor on May 26, 2022 3:00 PM EST- Posted in
- Memory
- AMD
- Intel
- Trade Shows
- DDR5
- RGB LED
- TeamGroup
- DDR5-6000
- Computex 2022
- DDR5-6600
Memory vendor TeamGroup has announced two new T-Force Delta RGB DDR5 memory kits during Computex 2022, being held in Taipei, Taiwan. This includes a high-frequency kit clocked to DDR5-6600 with a latency of CL34, as well as a low-latency kit operating at DDR5-6000 CL30. Both will be available in black or white and come with RGB LEDs.
Intel was the first company to introduce DDR5 memory to the desktop market in November 2021 with its 12th Gen Core series of processors. During its keynote at Computex, AMD announced that its latest Ryzen 7000 processors, due in the fall, will also support DDR5 memory, among many other interesting features. We did test how well DDR5 memory scales on Intel's 12th Gen Alder Lake platform, and there is merit to using both high-frequency and low latencies to maximize performance.
TeamGroup intends to add two new speed grades of its T-Force Delta RGB DDR5 memory, one with DDR5-6600 CL34 specifications and one with DDR5-6000 CL30. Both variants will be available in 32 GB kits (2 x 16 GB), with options including a striking white or subtle black heatsink. Both color schemes include an RGB-enabled lightbar with a 120° angle with smart RGB customization control. TeamGroup states that it uses carefully selected memory ICs, but they don't specify which manufacturer's DRAM the kits will be using.
The TeamGroup T-Force Delta RGB DDR5-6600 CL34 and DDR5-6000 CL30 are expected to hit retail shelves in July, but we currently don't have any details on pricing.
Source: TeamGroup
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ballsystemlord - Friday, May 27, 2022 - link
Now DDR5 has reached double the (non-overclocked) speed of DDR4. Exciting times!deepblue08 - Friday, May 27, 2022 - link
Maybe we will finally see some real-world performance improvementscoburn_c - Friday, May 27, 2022 - link
double the throughput, the same latencyPeachNCream - Friday, May 27, 2022 - link
More cache helps somewhat with that but this is a fair point and is probably even more problematic for systems with shared video memory.