Kingston Server Premier DDR5 RDIMMs Receive Validation on Intel Sapphire Rapids CPUs

Low Boon Shen
By Low Boon Shen 2 Min Read
Kingston Server Premier DDR5 RDIMMs Receive Validation on Intel Sapphire Rapids CPUs

Kingston Server Premier DDR5 RDIMMs Receive Validation on Intel Sapphire Rapids CPUs

Four DDR5-4800 modules are validated for Intel’s latest Xeon Scalable datacenter CPUs.

Kingston Server Premier DDR5 RDIMMs Receive Validation on Intel Sapphire Rapids CPUs

Kingston has confirmed that its DDR5-4800 Server Premier series RDIMMs (Register DIMMs) have been validated on Intel’s latest 4th Gen Xeon Scalable CPUs (codename Sapphire Rapids). The validation process is used to verify stability and any potential defects in break-in period and all modules must go through this process before it’s cleared to operate on servers.

The Server Premier series also has a few features that ensures its highest stability, including locked BOM (build of materials) – which provides consistent component brands and its revisions; 90-day part change notification, 8-quarter (2 year) roadmap, server platform validation, motherboard qualification, lifetime warranty and industry-leading service and support.

Four models are available, ranging from 16GB to 64GB (including single-rank and dual-rank variants):

KSM48R40BD4TMM-64HMR 64GB DDR5-4800 ECC Registered DIMM x80 CL40 2Rx4 1.1V
KSM48R40BS4TMM-32HMR 32GB DDR5-4800 ECC Registered DIMM x80 CL40 1Rx4 1.1V
KSM48R40BD8KMM-32HMR 32GB DDR5-4800 ECC Registered DIMM x80 CL40 2Rx8 1.1V
KSM48R40BS8KMM-16HMR 16GB DDR5-4800 ECC Registered DIMM x80 CL40 1Rx8 1.1V

“We’re excited to announce the validation of our next-generation server memory parts on Intel’s 4th Gen Xeon Scalable processor,” said Kingston. “Validation is always the first step for memory manufacturers to demonstrate the quality and compatibility of their memory solutions. DDR5 delivers the technology to scale in bandwidth and capacity to meet the performance requirements of tomorrow’s data centers.”

Pokdepinion: Took Intel long time to get the CPU launched, memory vendors must’ve waited for quite a while.

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