Today I have one more DDR4 kit, this time from ADATA. Memory tested in this thread is from standard series - without heatsinks. Product number of my kit is AD4U2133W4G15-B. It's more like a single stick product number but the same you can find in kits.
I guess I have too much luck to Hynix IC as this is 5th in a row Hynix based DDR4 kit which I'm testing.
As a standard memory, there is no XMP profile and we can use only auto/SPD settings of 2133 15-15-15-36 2N 1.20V. Actually similar SPD has any other DDR4 and we could see it also in previously tested Crucial kit.
Just a short note. All tests were performed on i7 5820K CPU and ASUS Rampage V Extreme motherboard. CPU clock is 4.2GHz and cache clock is 3.7GHz for all tests. 3.7GHz cache is about max stable on non-ASUS boards. I set it to this value to better show memory bandwidth differences for each setting. It's also enthusiast platform and most users will for sure overclock it ( not to mention we are on Overclockers.com ).
Tests made on SPD settings are below.
I guess I have too much luck to Hynix IC as this is 5th in a row Hynix based DDR4 kit which I'm testing.
As a standard memory, there is no XMP profile and we can use only auto/SPD settings of 2133 15-15-15-36 2N 1.20V. Actually similar SPD has any other DDR4 and we could see it also in previously tested Crucial kit.
Just a short note. All tests were performed on i7 5820K CPU and ASUS Rampage V Extreme motherboard. CPU clock is 4.2GHz and cache clock is 3.7GHz for all tests. 3.7GHz cache is about max stable on non-ASUS boards. I set it to this value to better show memory bandwidth differences for each setting. It's also enthusiast platform and most users will for sure overclock it ( not to mention we are on Overclockers.com ).
Tests made on SPD settings are below.
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