![]() The decision to concentrate on speed rather than performance has paid off. A version with two 4GB sticks costs £115, and a 32GB kit is a whopping £361. It’s also available in different capacities. This 16GB Corsair kit costs £173, which brings it in at £10.81-per-gigabyte – right in the middle of my high-end group. Elsewhere, latency comes in at 16-18-18-36, and the kit is available in white, blue or red variations to match your machine. ![]() This kind of design certainly goes against the current trend for big sticks of memory with plenty of lighting, but I’m happy to forego RGB LEDs if it means my memory is quicker and more reliable.Ĭorsair’s kit is designed around performance rather than aesthetic features, so it’s no surprise to see it running at 3200MHz – one of the highest speeds in this group. The lack of RGB LEDs means there’s more room in the budget to make the memory faster, and the smaller design means it will be easier to install chunky cooling hardware without the memory getting in the way. Corsair’s memory modules are coated with plain, slatted heatsinks made of solid aluminium, and they’re low-profile too – so these DIMMs are some of the smallest I’ve ever seen. This kit is our favourite high-end DDR4 product, although we’ll concede that it doesn’t look like it. Why we liked the Corsair Vengeance LPX 2 x 8GB (CMK16GX4M2B3200C16)
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