Alberto
Review of: HyperX Fury 32GB 2666MHz DDR4 CL16 DIMM (Kit of 2) Black XMP Desktop Memory HX426C16FB3K2/32Overall: Works greatI have a Dell Inspiron 5675 and did a lot of research about upgrading my system to more RAM. A lot of forums and discussions described very specific RAM models that would work best for my system. I believe there might be a couple versions of this Dell PC. For the record, I have the one with an AMD Ryzen 7 1700X processor.If you are like me and had struggles finding the right RAM, this set worked great. 32GB at 2666MHz, which is officially the fastest speed the Dell Inspiron 5675 can handle.Due to the limited options I had for this system, I didn't had much chance to shop around for price over value, but my main goal was performance. I acquired this set for $140.I was able to install them easily and quickly. It worked out-of-the-box. I didn't have any issues with drivers or so. I just turned on my computer, and it worked.Performance-wise, I had a single-stick 8GB RAM before, so this was a good upgrade. Nonetheless, I also had a classic HDD for storage, so my PC was still relatively slow. I upgraded it to a 2.5" SSD and had way better performance. After the SSD upgrade, I cannot comment on whether 8GB or 32GB will make a big difference since I haven't ran that comparison test.The main reason I upgraded my RAM was because I noticed that I was maxing out my 8GB of RAM when running some games and even with just a few Chrome tabs open. Therefore, I naturally wanted to increase my RAM. 16GB might have been sufficient, though. Decide at your own discretion.I probably would not buy this again since I should have upgraded my HDD to SSD, first, and then just upgrade to 16GB instead of 32GB of RAM. Therefore, just a personal preference.I would recommend this product to others, specially if you are looking for 32GB for your Dell Inspiron 5675.
Amazon Customer
Previously had only 8 gigs, it sucked but was decent never any crashes totally stable. But I was over it. Upgraded to 32 gigs from corsair and experienced game crashes so ran memtest86 and it returned thousands of errors. So I sent that corsair junk back and got this. This ram is excellent and yields no crashes or errors. One thing I noticed from reviews is most of the people who are rating this Kingston ram 1 star are incompetent and don't know what they are doing. If you go by the people with actual failures of this ram it's extremely small compared to corsair ram. Just looking at reviews I would guess you are 5 to 10 times more likely to get bad ram from corsair. just food for thought, i should have looked more closely and bought this to begin with. Kingston makes good ram.
GregGreg
I had originally bought DDR4 4000MHz RAM but it turns out Ryzen really doesn't do well with anything above DDR 3200. I understand the reason to be that the multiplier required to achieve DDR4 4000 results in unacceptable latency on Ryzen systems.I bought this memory instead, plugged it in, selected the XMP1 profile in BIOS and I'm cruising. I'm not trying to win any speed records but I also want to avoid bottlenecks wherever possible. Though a person could spend more money and get a slightly lower CAS setting, I don't care too much about that and CL16 is fine for my purposes.I'm happy with this RAM as it is rock solid stable, fast enough, and the price was right. Zero problems with Gigabyte B550M Aorus Pro and Ryzen 3700x.
Righteousdude80Righteousdude80
Installed in an Alienware Aurora R7 i78600 - incase anybody gets the upgrade bug. I installed 4x 16gb HyperX Fury 3200mhz sticks and it works great now. Initially windows wouldn't boot and then an Alienware support tool automatically scanned the machine and came back with errors - “memory limits exceeded”. I was sweating now but I knew the i7 8600 and board should be able to handle it so I played around with the settings (Dell states 2666 is the max which makes no sense). What ended up fixing the issue is: reboo into bios and disable XMP (advanced settings > performance options) all together which throttles the ram back to 2400mhz. Windows boots now and does whatever it needs to. Reboot into bios and enable XMP1 and boom! She runs perfect. Been stress testing, playing games, video editing, batch rendering, etc. Absolutely no issues and 100% stable. Hope this helps. Now that you know- 30 min install max.