HCHTech
Well-Known Member
- Reaction score
- 4,382
- Location
- Pittsburgh, PA - USA
When DDR was first a thing, it was (IMO) pretty important to get identical sticks of RAM. We learned early that it saved a lot of headaches to just buy the "kits" of matched modules. Old habits die hard, so we still do this as a matter of course. Recently, though we've been running into trouble finding matched kits. Latest example: we've got most of the parts for a Ryzen workstation here right now, but had quite a delay finding a matched 16GB kit of DDR4/2400. Ultimately, we ended up ordering one directly from Kingston after none of our regular distributors had anything in stock. Or, you find out that some places list items as "in stock" when they really mean "drop-shipped from the manufacturer", which, surprise surprise, doesn't have any.
I was just about to order four single 4GB sticks from D&H (identical, but unmatched) when my assistant found the right thing by calling Kingston.
I'm sure I read somewhere that chipsets today are more tolerant to slight differences in memory timing, etc., so I'm wondering what other folks do - Do you hold out for matched kits or just use identical but unmatched individual sticks?
I was just about to order four single 4GB sticks from D&H (identical, but unmatched) when my assistant found the right thing by calling Kingston.
I'm sure I read somewhere that chipsets today are more tolerant to slight differences in memory timing, etc., so I'm wondering what other folks do - Do you hold out for matched kits or just use identical but unmatched individual sticks?