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[Hardware]Intel Arrow Lake will support RAM speeds of over 9,200 MHz


Dean Ambrose™
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The presentation of the new range of Arrow Lake processors for desktop computers is scheduled for October 24, a date that has been delayed practically every week. The main, and probably the only, reason is that new motherboards compatible with these processors need to be available on the market and apparently they are a bit late.

These new 800 Series motherboards feature an LGA 1851 socket that will also be, or should, be compatible with the next generation. ASUS and Gigabyte plan to launch a large number of motherboards with the Z890 chip for the Intel Core Ultra 200 although the specifications of most are unknown.

The well-known leaker of Core Ultra 200 for desktop from Intel.

Core Ultra 200 supports up to 9,200 MHz DDR5 memory
What is most striking is that it will be compatible with DDR5-9,200 MHz memory using one DIMM per channel, which implies that the Arrow Lake have an improved IMC to offer support for faster DDR5 memories. This represents a substantial improvement compared to this manufacturer's last generation Z890 Taichi which was capable of offering support for DDR5-7200 MHz memory.

Based on the specifications posted by this user, it is most likely a microATX or ATX board with 4 memory bays. In addition, it has support for Intel XMP, Adaptive Boost Technology and Thermal Velocity Boost, standard functions of motherboards compatible with Intel processors.

To clear up doubts and know all the specifications of the motherboards compatible with the latest generation of Intel processors, we will have to wait, at least until October 24, the scheduled date for the launch of this new range, as long as it is not delay again.

Intel avoids repeating the mistakes of previous generations
The 13th and 14th generation of Intel processors have been a hard blow for the company and for the users who blindly trust it and from which it may take time to recover.

Intel does not want this problem to be repeated with the next generation and has gotten all motherboard manufacturers with the Z890 chip to integrate Intel's default power profile as standard, instead of using profiles that offer higher associated consumption. to higher performance and which has been the culprit of the stability errors of these processors.

If Intel, instead of blaming the motherboard manufacturers, had worked to find a solution to this problem from the beginning, it is most likely that the stability problems that both generations would have had remained as a simple anecdote like the performance problem that has affected the Ryzen 9000 with Windows.

 

https://hardzone.es/noticias/componentes/procesaadores-intel-arrow-lake-soporte-ram-9200-mhz/

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