PERFORMANCE
Test Setup
Processor: Intel Core i7 3770K
Motherboard: ASUS Maximus V Extreme
Memory: Kingston HyperX 10th Anniversary Edition DDR3-2400
Storage: Kingston HyperX 3K SSD 120GB
PSU: Seasonic X-760W
Cooling: Corsair H100 (Max)
Case: CoolerMaster HAF922
Monitor: LG E2350V
VGA: ASUS ROGÂ Matrix HD7970 Platinum
We would like to thank Kingston Technologies Inc. for providing the sample used in this review.
SiSoft’s SANDRA is a benchmarking, testing and system information application which provides plenty of options in gaining information regarding your system. For this test, we gauge the memory bandwidth of the system.
Kingston’s new modules sit just below the aggressively clocked NANO modules and easily ousting the more expensive Avexir Cores.
Maxon offers a nice benchmark tool called Cinebench which really stresses your entire system to render a very complex scene. The output score is completely unique to Cinebench but allows us to have a rough idea of how the CPU works with 3D rendering tasks.
The HyperX 10th Anniversary Edition module starts to warm up shooting up to top spot in this test.
X264 HDÂ is a free benchmarking tool that shows the performance of a system by converting a 720p video clip.
Great work from from Kingston in this also.
WinRAR’s self-test measure how a system handles compression and decompression workloads and is quite sensitive to memory performance.
Kingston’s HyperX 10th Anniversary Edition memory smokes the Avexir Cores in our compression benchmark.
SuperPI is a common benchmark used by a lot of enthusiasts. It’s also very sensitive to memory performance.
The Kingston HyperX 10th Anniversary Edition memory stumbles hard in our SuperPI32 test, trailing  by about 4 seconds which is quite a big deal.