TheOverclocker Issue 27 | Page 24

Kingston Hyper X Genesis 10th Anniversary Edition 16GB Kit RRP: $225.99 | Website: www.kingston.com Test Machine • INTEL Core i7 4960X • ASUS Rampage IV Extreme Black Edition (0208) • AMD Radeon R9 290X • Corsair Force LS 240GB SSD • Cooler Master Silent Pro M2 1500W • Windows 7 64-bit SP1 (Catalyst 13.11) K ingston Hyper X memory is likely the oldest enthusiast series we know of. Not surprising given that Kingston is possibly the oldest manufacture of high speed DRAM. For all intents and purposes, experienced overclockers will remember a set of Kingston Hyper X memory at some point in their overclocking history. This is particularly true of the BH5 DDR memory era. Most of us will remember just how pervasive the Hyper X 2x512MB 2-2-25 Memory was and virtually everyone was operating these in at 500MHz or higher. 24 The OverClocker Issue 27 | 2013 That was a long time ago though and since then Kingston has had various successes and challenges. Much like most memory vendors, the DRAM industry has been both kind and of late very challenging. For us on the receiving end, we’re still holding on to our DIMMS with PSC chips and such, patiently waiting for the day where we may have champion memory again reminiscent of the BH5/ BH6 and perhaps even TCCD of old. Until that day, kits such as we have here are what we may expect from Kingston or at least on the lower end of their product range. Kingston marked off this kit as their anniversary addition, celebrating exactly 10 years of the Hyper X brand. If such engraving means anything to you, you’ll appreciate having a limited edition set of memory. We however are exclusively focused on the performance or at least in how far we can push this set of memory before it gives in. Usually we would test this set on the Z87 platform, but it is four sticks and we do happen to have a particularly useful platform for quad channel kits. If there is ever going to be a motherboard that would push a set to its limits, it would have to be the Rampage IV Extreme Black Edition and thus we tested on this motherboard to see just how far we could go. We started at 2133MHz and attempted to tighten the settings as much as we could. With the tightest primary timings set to 10-11-11-28-2T, our memory was not able to go lower much more than that. We could not post at C9 thus we promptly moved on to the next divider available to us which was 2400MHz. Starting with the XMP profile, we measured typical results for this configuration. Some tuning was in order for the secondary and tertiary timings which yielded much improvement, but for the most part the numbers you see here are only those reported by the