GSKill Trident Z 4133Mhz RGB CL19 DDR4 Dual Channel Memory Review
Author: Dennis GarciaBenchmarks - Synthetic
ASUS Maximus IX Apex - Z270 Chipset
Intel Core i7 7700K (4.2Ghz) Quad Core 4 x 256KB L2 Cache 8MB L3 Cache
Thermaltake Water 2.0 Performer
1x nVidia GTX 980Ti
Micron C300 128GB SSD
HP dvd1260i Multiformat 24x Writer
Thermaltake Toughpower Grand 1050 Watt PSU
Windows 10 Professional 64bit
Memory Tested
2x GSKill TridentZ PC4-330000 8GB DDR4 (19-19-19-39)
Reference Memory
2x GSKill TridentZ PC4-27700 8GB DDR4 (16-18-18-38)
Sandra is a software collection of synthetic benchmarks that will give us a basic idea as to what a system is capable of. It should be noted that SiSoft numbers can change depending on what hardware is being tested. These were recorded using Sandra Professional Version 24.27.2017.6
AIDA64 Extreme Edition is a streamlined diagnostic and benchmarking software package designed to assist with overclocking and general system tuning. The package also contains modules to assess the performance of the processor, system memory, and disk drives in addition to normal stuff like stress testing and troubleshooting.
Unigine is a synthetic benchmark much like 3DMark Vantage, but supports the newest of DirectX 11 technologies. The benchmark comes with lots of heavy tessellation and soft shadows to work the more flexible shaders found on DirectX 11 graphic cards. This makes this benchmark ideal for seeing exactly what a best case scenario might look like for a DirectX 11 capable GPU.
Benchmark Settings
HWBot Benchmark
DirectX 11 Presets
DirectX 9 Presets
PCMark 8 is an overall system benchmark to measure and compare PC performance using real-world tasks and applications. There are six individual testing scenarios using applications that reflect typical PC use in the home and at the office. This approach ensures that PCMark measures the things that matter, highlighting performance differences that will be apparent to end users and consumers.
When you are dealing with high performance memory modules there is very little that separates them in terms of overall performance. The charts above reflect the performance numbers between two vastly different GSKill Trident Z dual channel memory kits and their XMP profiles. The synthetic benchmark numbers reflect what you would expect, faster memory = higher numbers. The surprise comes when we look at the results of the real-world benchmarks. Here you’ll see a very minor increase between stock and XMP giving you a pretty good idea as how beneficial certain memory modules can be.