this post was submitted on 14 Nov 2023
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Discussion around the Framework mission of building products that last longer by making them upgradeable, customizable, and repairable. Consumer electronics can be better for you and for the environment.

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Having instability with my 4800mhz ram I got for my Ryzen FW 13, so I'm just gonna get new ram. Hurts the wallet though, so how much would it impact performance to have this latency difference?

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[โ€“] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The CL primary timing has very little direct perf changes. The other primary timings have some slight perf changes but not by a whole lot.

The main perf differences will come from secondary/tertiary timings which will be auto trained by the motherboard (or set manually of the BIOS supports manual tuning). CL has some influence on certain timings but the differences are still minor for what will be auto trained. The timings set by the auto training will be dependent on the memory IC type, binning of the IC, PCB quality of the DIMMs, voltage being supplied to the DIMMs, DRAM frequency, CPU (IMC [integrated memory controller], some other misc stuff), and slightly by the primary timings.

The XMP values tend to allow one to infer what IC is being used and the bin of it (if said IC is even binned), which is what usually tends to make the biggest differences in what the timings will be. But the advertised primary timings themselves tend not to be the reason for perf differences. Note that better XMP values won't always mean a better DIMM. Possible to have high quality ICs in a low tiered product.

[โ€“] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago

In the desktop space, all of those secondary and tertiary timings being auto-set to something reasonable depends on the specific RAM kit being on that motherboard model's QVL. I have no idea if something similar is at play here, but if so, it could explain people getting poor results with anything other than 5600 MHz RAM similar to or better than what Framework sells.