While the JEDEC standard for DDR3 slowly creeped up from 800 MHz to 1600-1866 MHz, the new DDR4 modules will come out of the gate at DDR4-2133 CAS 15. Similarly with DDR3, the JEDEC specifications seemed a little slow for the memory manufacturers who are all keen to get more market share than anyone else. To that extent, Corsair in conjunction with ASUS is launching today the highest specification DDR4 announced to date.

The king on the plate is a DDR4-3300 Dominator Platinum kit, designed to work with all motherboards but especially with the ASUS X99 Deluxe and Rampage V Extreme motherboards. Corsair and ASUS have formed a partnership to expedite validation on ASUS’ high end motherboards along with fine tuning: I imagine we might see a specific memory profile or two on the Extreme for users wanting to overclock these particular modules.

One of the interesting things to note is that DRAM module manufacturers all bid on batches of JEDEC or near-JEDEC specification ICs. It is then up to them to bin the ICs (either automated or by hand) to place on the modules. The higher the specification of module, typically the more ICs (or the more batches) the system has to go through, which in turn puts more pricing pressure on the kits. Pricing for these modules will be higher than most, and due to their timings will initially only be available in 4x4 GB kits. We will find out the pricing and the sub-timing when Corsair puts the kits on its website.

The 3000 and 3200 MHz kits will play up against the modules from other DRAM manufacturers, but it would seem that Corsair is first to market with the 3300 MHz modules. We plan on testing a fair amount of DDR4 in the next month, especially as it forms a significant cost of a Haswell-E build.

Additional: Specifications for the 4x4GB kits have just come in, giving:

DDR4-3000 at 15-17-17-35, 1.35V (CMD16GX4M4B3000C15)
DDR4-3200 at 16-18-18-36, 1.35V (CMD16GX4M4B3200C16)
DDR4-3300 at 16-18-18-36, 1.35V (CMD16GX4M4B3300C16)

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  • designgears - Friday, August 29, 2014 - link

    Wow, those timings!
  • colinstu - Saturday, August 30, 2014 - link

    I remember when DDR2 came out and everyone freaked out about the timings compared to DDR.
  • Metroid - Monday, September 1, 2014 - link

    I think he meant = awesome timings compared to ddr3 when it came out, for example, when ddr3 came, a good ddr2 used to be "G.SKILL, DDR2 1066 (PC2 8500) Timing 5-5-5-15 ", ddr3 first came with 1066 mhz and latency = 9, so as earlier ddr4 versions have latencies of "PC4-17000 C16 2133MHz", this one can match the good ddr3 was "DDR4 3300mhz at 16-18-18-36, 1.35V", So these kits are awesome.
  • soccerballtux - Thursday, March 12, 2015 - link

    once again, the latency is wrt the clock. 16-18-18-36 @ dd4-3200 is the same as 8-9-9-18 on ddr3-1600.

    Which is pretty good.

    I don't know why everone fusses over these
  • Cravenmor - Friday, August 29, 2014 - link

    I know, right?
  • SleepyFE - Friday, August 29, 2014 - link

    Now that we have such high speeds they should switch to GHz. 3.3 GHz makes more sense than 3300 MHz. I can understand they used MHz when they still made 800 MHz memory, but now it 1.3 GHz or above.
  • scottrichardson - Saturday, August 30, 2014 - link

    In all my computer years, I have never really understood RAM speeds. Probably as a Mac user I am used to just buying one speed RAM - the speed that the mobo supports. However, isn't the Z99 chipset 2133MHz? How is having 3300MHz RAM going to help if the mobo 2133Mhz? Sorry for the n00b question.
  • samsonjs - Saturday, August 30, 2014 - link

    It officially supports that, but can run faster. Like a CPU.

    I believe the main difference on a Mac is that there are no controls to run memory at different speeds, so it's stuck at whatever it shipped with.
  • Morawka - Friday, August 29, 2014 - link

    crazzzy expensive compared to gskill
  • Nickolai - Saturday, August 30, 2014 - link

    What is that 5-pin connector on the side?

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