vהאתר טומס הארדוור עשה גם הוא בדיקה של תאימות זיכורונת למעבדים הללו:
https://www.tomshardware.com/reviews/am ... 310-2.html
הנה המסקנות:
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The easy conclusion is that every enhanced setting that you’d expect to boost the performance of AMD’s Ryzen 3000 series CPUs, does, that it’s not optimized for any specific data rate but scales proportionally with all stable data rates. So here’s a short list of our findings—that is to say, confirmations:
Going from two ranks to four ranks of memory is by far the best way to improve performance in memory-bottlenecked applications. At current memory density, that usually means having at least 32GB (even if you don’t think you’ll use that much capacity).
Switching from 2T to 1T command rate provides a similar performance boost to shaving two cycles from CAS Latency.
The only time DDR4-3200 C14 and DDR4-3600 C16 have similar performance is when the slower kit has the better (1T) command rate.
Overclocking to DDR4-3733 provides a nice performance boost, but only if you’re able to stably do it with synchronized UCLK and FCLK.
The best practical configuration is four ranks of DDR4-3600 at the lowest stable latencies. Reminder: Four ranks can be achieved from either four single-rank or two dual-rank DIMMs.
Keeping in mind that not every overclocking adventure produces the expected results, a 32GB DDR4-3600 C16 kit such as the one we used today is a great starting point and an acceptable finish line.[/left]