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XPG LANCER 32GB DDR5 5200MHz


EHW Ai

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This is the only ram I can find in stock atm for $340 CDN. Since I hope to see my MB ship next week I kinda don't have a choice but to grab it since who knows if or when anymore will be in stock. I do plan on replacing it first chance something decent comes out but my question is how bad do you think it'll be? I've never heard of the brand so I'm not expecting great things. Comes with PMIC and ECC for some reason as well.

 

 

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Ddr5 is ecc by default. No idea about the brand. 

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CPU: 5800x
MOTHERBOARD: ASUS TUF Gaming B550-Plus
RAM: XMP 3600mhz CL16
GPU: 7900XT
SOUNDCARD: Sound Blaster Z 5.1 home theater
MONITOR: 4K 65 inch TV
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Just in case there's any confusion on the ECC that is standard with DDR5. The ECC included in those modules is on-die ECC, which can automatically correct in chip bit flips. It is mostly there to increase stability as process nodes get smaller and bandwidth increases with DDR5.

 

The on-die ECC won't correct in transit errors nor will it report the in chip errors to the platform or the OS.  For that there will still be traditional RDIMMs/LRDIMMs.

 

The on-die ECC is more similar in concept to the error correction in NAND SSDs. 

 

*Edit*

On the topic of the Adata XPG, I had a few DDR3 XPG kits and had no issues with them.

Edited by tictoc
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Never heard of Adata?  Man, I had some Adata XPG (I think they were) DDR400 sticks back in the day that did like DDR600 speeds.  Adata's fine as a brand and they've been around forever, what matters is the IC's on the sticks.  I don't know DDR5 at all, so can't really comment, but the brand itself is fine.  Those speeds seem okay for early DDR5.  I'd rock those sticks for a while no problem.

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CPU: Ryzen 7900x
GPU: Sapphire Pulse RX 7900XTX
PSU: Cooler Master 850w Platinum
CPU COOLER: Cooler Master MasterLiquid PL360 Flux
MOTHERBOARD: Gigabyte B650 Aorus AX
SSD/NVME: Solidigm P41 Plus 2TB Gen4 NVME
RAM: G.Skill Flare X DDR5-6000
CASE: HAF700 Berserker
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CPU: AMD Opteron 180 @ 3.0GHz
MOTHERBOARD: Asus A8N SLI
RAM: 4x1GB Corsair XMS DDR400 @ 2.5-3-3-6
PSU: eVGA 600BQ
GPU: Sapphire HD5870
SOUNDCARD: Asus Xonar DG
OPTICAL: DVDRW with Lightscribe
SSD/NVME: 64GB HP 2.5" SSD
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CPU: AMD Athlon 1100MHz
MOTHERBOARD: ECS K7S5A
RAM: 2x256MB Corsair XMS DDR400 @ 133MHz / CAS2
PSU: Antec 350w
GPU: ATI Radeon 9800 PRO
SOUNDCARD: Creative Live! 5.1
OPTICAL: LG 16x DVD-ROM
OPTICAL 2: IOMagic 48x16x48 CDRW
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53 minutes ago, pioneerisloud said:

Never heard of Adata?  Man, I had some Adata XPG (I think they were) DDR400 sticks back in the day that did like DDR600 speeds.  Adata's fine as a brand and they've been around forever, what matters is the IC's on the sticks.  I don't know DDR5 at all, so can't really comment, but the brand itself is fine.  Those speeds seem okay for early DDR5.  I'd rock those sticks for a while no problem.


Thanks. I figured they would be ok. They should do well enough till I can find some decent GSkill.

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One heck of a nice write-up here: 

WWW.OVERCLOCKERS.COM

ADATA's XPG line of memory grows to include their new Lancer DDR5 modules. They offer an XMP rating of...

 

 

Micron chips. Should be pretty decent. ECC is a good thing. Takes error correcting off of the CPU. Should be a good thing for stability. I'm sure the default timings could be tweaked. 

3.50

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CPU: 5600x
GPU: EVGA RTX 3090 FTW3 Ultra
GPU 2: EVGA RTX 3080ti FTW3 Ultra
GPU 3: EVGA RTX 3080ti XC3 Hybrid
GPU 4: EVGA RTX 3070ti FTW3 Ultra
GPU 5: MSI RTX 3070 Gaming X Trio
GPU 6: Asus RTX 2080ti ROG STRIX
GPU 7: EVGA RTX 3080ti FTW3 Ultra
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There is quite a bit of information that needs to be addressed with DDR5! The biggest is its ability to boost past stock/XMP automatically like the CPUs do and its newer design elements. This is going to all be covered on the site soon!

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