TeamGroup introduces the T-Force Delta RGB DDR5 memory with a maximum data rate of 5600 MT/s.
TEAMGROUP today announced the launch of their all-new DELTA DDR5 Memory Series, the first DDR5 modules to have RGB lighting, providing gamers who like visual flare with both next-generation performance and eye-pleasing illumination.
Since the end of 2020, TEAMGROUP has been at the forefront of next-generation DDR5 development, working closely with motherboard manufacturers to perform extensive validation testing. Whether it is the testing and research of DDR5’s new PMIC architecture or XMP overclocking parameters, the company has achieved very fruitful results. Today TEAMGROUP is launching its brand new DELTA DDR5 Memory Series, the first DDR5 modules to be equipped with RGB lighting effect, providing gamers who enjoy visual flair with both next-level speed and eye-pleasing illumination.
The T-FORCE DELTA RGB DDR5 continues the design language of the DELTA DDR4 Series by maintaining the ultra-large spreader with wide-angled RGB edges and a minimalist geometrical surface. The overall look is further enhanced by its sleek stealth-fighter-inspired design. In addition, the color and flashing speed of each RGB LED used in DELTA RGB DDR5 can be independently controlled, offering more freedom to customize lighting effects than a typical RGB DDR4 memory. Currently samples have been sent to ASUS, GIGABYTE, MSI, ASROCK, BIOSTAR and other motherboard manufacturers for lighting tests. Players will be able to easily customize their own dazzling RGB effects through the manufacturers’ lighting software.
This first series of next-gen RGB memory will support Intel’s XMP 3.0 1-click overclocking and come in 16GB and 32GB capacities with frequencies of 4,800MHz up to 5,600MHz, far exceeding the limit of DDR4 generation. Besides delivering a super smooth experience and blistering speeds, the biggest difference of this release is the new configuration-adjusting PMIC architecture. The product’s warranty period was initially set to be 3 years but will be adjusted based on the improvement of raw materials or technology. The T-FORCE DELTA RGB DDR5 Memory Series is expected to hit shelves worldwide in the fourth quarter of 2021 alongside the release of next-generation motherboards. For the latest information, please refer to the official TEAMGROUP website.
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Senior Member
Posts: 769
Joined: 2016-10-04
The CAS on these so far has been unbelievably bad. The people that have compared top of the line DDR4 4400 and initial DR5 5600 have said the performance is about the same.
If big numbers didn't rule the word we could probably get DDR5 4000 CL 12 32GB per stick in 2022, but people would wouldn't buy it because 5600 is a bigger number.
We won't see CL16 or less at DDR5 as we didn't saw CL7 with the DDR4 or high speed DDR3 over 2000Mhz.
As for those 5600 DDR5 kits are pretty slow considering 8400 DDR5 will be the high end and around 7800 the sweet spot.
Senior Member
Posts: 673
Joined: 2008-08-19
RGB is so... outdated.
Senior Member
Posts: 445
Joined: 2013-04-05
We won't see CL16 or less at DDR5 as we didn't saw CL7 with the DDR4 or high speed DDR3 over 2000Mhz.
As for those 5600 DDR5 kits are pretty slow considering 8400 DDR5 will be the high end and around 7800 the sweet spot.
Because the focus is on jacking the frequency up, and that will sell. We don't need it though. Big capacity per stick and existing speeds but with lower latency would be great, it just wont sell because the frequency number isn't high enough. With the right setup we can do DDR4 4000 CL 14 on a lot of systems right now, the capacity per stick is usually limited to 8GB though in that configuration. I haven't seen much in the way of benchmarks where going over 4000 even matters much.
Member
Posts: 40
Joined: 2020-03-24
The first few batches of DDR5 are for the tester to use, especially we still need to understand the final price tag for the next-gen CPU with DDR5 goes as well.
RAM performance really won't boost up too much in gaming as we using high speed RAM nowadays. (unless you going for that min-max benching)
Senior Member
Posts: 445
Joined: 2013-04-05
The CAS on these so far has been unbelievably bad. The people that have compared top of the line DDR4 4400 and initial DR5 5600 have said the performance is about the same.
If big numbers didn't rule the word we could probably get DDR5 4000 CL 12 32GB per stick in 2022, but people would wouldn't buy it because 5600 is a bigger number.