G.SKILL Announces Zeta R5 NEO Series DDR5 RDIMM Memory for Ryzen Threadripper (PRO) 7000 Series

G.SKILL, a leading manufacturer of high-performance PC components, has announced its new Zeta R5 Neo series overclocked DDR5 R-DIMM memory kits. Specifically designed for the latest AMD Ryzen Threadripper 7000 series processors and AMD Ryzen Threadripper Pro 7000 WX-series chips, these modules bring record-breaking speeds to AMD’s workstation platform.

The Zeta R5 Neo represents G.SKILL’s fastest R-DIMM memory yet, reaching up to DDR5-6400 with 32GB modules. With quad-channel support on TRX50 motherboards, the company will offer 64GB (16GB x4) and 128GB (32GB x4) kit configurations at launch. Both variations feature tight CL32-39-39-102 timings for optimized performance.

Overclocking Capabilities Through AMD EXPO

Notably, the new AMD TRX50 chipset enables memory overclocking directly through R-DIMM modules for the first time. G.SKILL is implementing this functionality into the Zeta R5 Neo series with AMD EXPO profiles. Using these pre-defined profiles, users can easily overclock the memory to its rated speed of DDR5-6400 through the BIOS. With its hand-screened ICs validated for overclocking, the Zeta R5 Neo unlocks higher levels of bandwidth and responsiveness for Threadripper workstations.

Massive Bandwidth for Creative Applications

Combined with the 128 PCIe lanes and up to 96 CPU cores of 3rd Gen Threadripper Pro, the low-latency DDR5-6400 memory can drive massive datasets for video editing, 3D rendering, AI development and more. Transferring data at speeds up to 102 GB/s across the quad-channel interface, the Zeta R5 Neo feeds the full capabilities of AMD’s latest HEDT platform.

Global Availability

G.SKILL plans to launch the Zeta R5 Neo series through its distribution partners starting November 2023. Offering the pinnacle of memory performance for new AMD Threadripper builds, it cements G.SKILL’s long-running dominance in the premium overclocking memory space. With AMD R-DIMM overclocking now a reality, the company aims to push frequency boundaries even further for professional workstation use-cases.

See also: