Overclocking
Disclaimer: Overclocking is never guaranteed so that the results may vary depending on certain conditions and various hardware configurations. I am not recommending overclocking if you do not know what you are doing. High voltages may damage hardware, and the warranty will not cover it.
Kingston FURY Renegade 2x48GB DDR5-6400 memory kit uses Hynix M-die IC, which is the best IC we can find in DDR5 memory kits nowadays. It guarantees high frequencies and still acceptable voltages while overclocking.
Since high RAM capacities don’t like higher voltages while pushing at higher frequencies, then the optimal for 7600MT/s seems to be 1.35V VDD/VDDQ. It’s lower than it is in the XMP, but we find it gives the highest stability at DDR5-7600 CL38-47-47. Below, you can see the screenshot with some tests, while all others are listed in the performance comparison on the previous page.
Running at various other settings with tighter timings but lower frequencies was also possible. The 6000MT/s could run perfectly stable at CL28-38-38 1.35V, a good alternative for AMD motherboards with problems with 6400MT/s at a 1:1 ratio. Intel shouldn’t be limited to at least 7000MT/s.
It’s one more Fury Renegade memory kit, which gives us a wide range of possible settings, from very tight timings to top frequencies. Motherboards don’t have problems with the timing training of Fury Renegade, and the XMP profile loads quickly after clearing CMOS, even on AMD motherboards, which are known to have a slower first start. It proves that Kingston did good work.
Whether you want to overclock the FURY Renegade RAM or not, it will provide excellent results in gaming and everything else you do. Like every previously reviewed Kingston DDR5 memory, the FURY Renegade 6400MT/s can be recommended without hesitation.