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CORSAIR Dominator Platinum RGB DDR5 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5 6000 C30 $212.61 Delivered @ Amazon AU

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ATL according to the Three Camels.

$299 at PCCG

Item Model Number ‎CMT32GX5M2B6000C30
ASIN ‎B0C3RXBJL9
DDR5 SDRAM

Be quick, these prices change often.

Price History at C CamelCamelCamel.

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closed Comments

  • Showing $285 now

    • Still shows $212.61 for me, perhaps Prime only?

      • I just hard refreshed and showing the deal price now.

  • +4

    There's also this https://www.amazon.com.au/dp/B0C4Y1ZQCS $162.86
    CORSAIR Vengeance DDR5 32GB (2x16GB) DDR5 6400 (PC5-51200) CL32 1.4V Intel XMP Memory Kit - White

    • That is indeed a good price for a decent kit! (but no ARGB)

      Apart from the aesthetics, the Doms use dual-path heat exchange (DHX) technology.

      "DHX employs both the aluminum heatsinks on the outside of a memory module as well as a specially designed PCB to conduct heat away from the memory chips more efficiently. Since DOMINATOR memory kits use DHX as part of their core design, you can generally expect higher memory stability when you really push these kits to the bleeding edge of performance through overclocking."

      More info here.

  • -1

    XMP only

    • -1

      Wrong. I have this RAM in my AMD build. It supports EXPO.

      • Expo profile certified has a different sku CMT32GX5M2B6000Z30K

        Linked PCCG product is the expo certified model while amazon deal was the xmp model only.

        • -2

          Wrong again. Not how it works.

          • +1

            @Justin9mm: Enlighten me please then? Seriously curious. Why would they release different products with same speeds and same timings and the only difference is one is xmp only and one is expo certified. Same when i got my Gskill trident neo sticks. They have xmp only models and ones with expo profile certified models, same speeds, same timings.

    • You can use these on both mate.

  • -4

    Base hz 4800

    • Nah this is true. Make sure you know what board you have. The ram may do 6000mhz, but that doesnt mean your cpu or MB can handle it.

      I recently bought a nice rig the other week (like 2 weeks ago), and went for the 6000mhz ram. I got a 7800X3D, with an msi x670E. Decent board and CPU.

      I thought i got robbed when my system was showing 4800mhz in the BIOS.

      I worked out the expo thing (amds version of XMP) but if i try and go to 6000mhz the computer then takes ages to start, theres lights on the motherboard and stuff on boot. It does run well once going, but defeats the purpose of having a fast M2 just to not be able to boot.
      Put it back to 4800mhz, all is well. Weird because my board can handle over 7/8000mhz!
      Then i found out that CPU is officially rated to support 5200mhz.. so another thing you need to check. I assumed 7800x3d would be fine.
      You can get it to work, but its not ideal unless you are keen to push it. Hence why it baselines at 4800mhz and you OC at your own risk.
      Needless to say im sticking with 4800 as it runs fine.. just check it out to make sure you are good to run 6000mhz.

      • I'm really interested in this, as I have the same CPU and MB on the way, and in the process of choosing RAM.

      • +1

        Enable EXPO/XMP, switch it back to 6000mhz and enable "Memory Context Restore" under the BIOS settings menu. That setting will make your system boot as fast as it does at 4800mhz.

        • Yeah I read about that, but decided against it. Some people got errors down the track.

          I have no doubt, fine tuning the timings manually would result in the system being happy overall, but more effort than I want to invest.

          https://www.reddit.com/r/Amd/comments/11m10fz/turning_on_mem…

          Essentially the system when enabled runs checks to ensure signal quality between controller and chip, then adjust the system to optimise settings. Enabling MCR, skips this step and relies on previous "training" conducted to boot up quicker, however the old training might not always be the most suitable and end up being unstable.

          I am not a PC engineer and until I built my PC last week knew nothing about the any of the above, so take my advice lightly, I have just dome some research for a few days reading about the topic. I am sure someone can give you more certainty than I can as to why this is/isnt good.

      • Thats the memory training. You can then turn it off once it done it the first time and boot quick again after you do a bios update. Im stable on a 7800x3D at 6400 32cl

  • The base clock is 4800, 6000 is OC, depends on your cpu and motherboard might not reach that. Most ddr5 have 5000ish base clock. 7000 8000 require very expensive mother boards to achieve that (OC)

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