So Patriot has already shown their own set of kits for the core 7i chipset, with the previous review that they also made a first pre-setting memory clock for a Intel core 2 Duo and (if it would happen) for AMD users as well; with good overall performance and lighting fast speeds in both latency and bandwidth carrying that amount of information from one place to another is a great thing to pay but with this kit only has the same specs as the OCZ DDR3 kit but cost only $485 only $25 less. So we will look at the sticks right now. Okay, the Patriot Viper series form the new Core 7i platform comes in three batchers of memory modules all with the option of having 1 GB each and also to 2GB each module having a total of about 6GB so the total page memory file is on the level on where you need it most like in high priority apps that need a lot of space to run or just enough memory to handle 2GB of VRAM in a 64-bit OS system (well if you want to have all of the memory to be address in the software). But the design of the Viper is just as the same as its previous brethren, but having another memory to add in the equation., with high rise aluminium heat-spreaders and some air holes to let cool air to pass through but also with some aesthetics this really looks good with blue rig and a board that sports a great deal of performance like a T6P from ASUS or even the Gigabyte Extreme. But most of the part of the memory kit thing this really has some good specs to look at, with 1600MHz DDR3 speed with the same latency timings of 8-8-8-24 and also having a 1.67V which in the entire core 7i platform memory all runs in the least voltage memory but still acquire a lot of head-room, 1600MHz who can make 1600MHz in 1.5V, even DDR2 memory has some problems doing that. But with the technological advances, we could expect the DDR4 memory running at only 1.4V with a speed memory frequency of about 2100MHz and it is on the new generation Core 7i, but that it the future that I could think of, well, the test show that It has a lower than expected score in raw bandwidth only going 12340MB/s to the max in Everest while the latency timings look much better with 35.7ns so you can load most games or Adobe in a matter of seconds. Overall the memory kit looks nice for that price, well with some bandwidth score it still up there in the competition, and even looks good for those open profile cases like Antec Skeleton.
