Page 2 - A Closer Look, Test System
The Patriot Viper Elite 5 Ultra DDR5-6000 2x48GB, being a part of the latest performance DDR5 line from the company, utilizes a set of medium-profile heatspreaders. The black heatspreaders with white Viper logo and branding are prominent on both sides. The model we have does not have RGB LEDs, but you can buy a version that does. The Viper Elite 5 Ultra's aluminum pieces are conservatively shaped with simple lines, save for an angled end for some additional visual flare. Aluminum is lightweight and serves as a decent heat conductor. The Viper Elite 5 Ultra is 40mm tall from the pins to the top of the headspreader, or less than 10mm taller than modules with no heatspreaders at all. It is hard to imagine the Viper Elite 5 Ultra will interfere with any modern processor cooler, since the heatspreader height is moderate. Whether you like to call it a marketing gimmick or whatnot, it is impossible to find performance memory without any form of a heatspreader attached for decades now. They do undeniably serve a purpose in dissipating heat, but for most memory modules, unless run at a voltage significantly over designed voltages -- which you will not, thanks to integrated memory controller voltage limits on Intel and AMD CPUs -- this feature is certainly not a requirement.
The heatspreader design of the Patriot Viper Elite 5 Ultra modules is asymmetrical when looked at straight on, but symmetrical between sides, which is logical, because memory can be installed in different directions depending on your motherboard manufacturer and design. Besides functional purposes, it also improves the look. The Viper logo is on one side with the branding on the other. Patriot's logo is not permanently etched anywhere at all like many of their latest products. A specification label is found on one side. It lists information like the model number, in this case, VEU596G6028K, bandwidth, CAS latency, voltage, and the kit's memory capacity. The Patriot Viper Elite 5 Ultra DDR5-6000 2x48GB is made in Taiwan.
As you can see more clearly in our photo above, the Patriot Viper Elite 5 Ultra DDR5-6000 2x48GB has a very nice black PCB. We can also spot the power management integrated circuit, commonly abbreviated as PMIC, near the center.
Its heatspreader on top is composed of two separate pieces plus a plastic diffuser. In this case, it is solid black, but the RGB LED version will be translucent. The heatspreaders are held to the module itself by multiple strips of thermally conductive adhesive and are not physically locked together. The plastic diffuser is connected to the heatspreaders by thin layers of adhesive. The adhesive force between the two heatspreaders and memory ICs is pretty strong as always from the company, so if you ever do take them off, keep your hair dryer around.
From our above photo, it should also be clearer on how the heatspreaders are designed. The heatspreaders are mirror images of each other. The pieces are made from solid aluminum, which feels solid in the hand and thick enough to resist easy bending. It is not thick enough to hold a lot of heat, so it should dissipate heat energy reasonably quickly into the surrounding environment. Either way, you will probably never remove them, since the heatspreader design is a selling point. In the unlikely event it will not clear your processor heatsink, then you might as well not buy this kit, haha.
A closer look at the memory chips on the Patriot Viper Elite 5 Ultra DDR5-6000 2x48GB dual channel memory kit. The original manufacturer and part number inscriptions were removed, but they look like SK hynix M-die chips to me, with eight 3GB chips on both sides for a total of 48GB on each DIMM. As mentioned on the previous page, these RAM modules run at a frequency of DDR5-6000 with 28-40-40-100 latencies. These modules operate at a stock voltage of 1.40V, which is higher than the base DDR5 voltage of 1.1V.
Our test configuration is as follows:
CPU: Intel Core Ultra 7 265K
CPU Cooling: Noctua NH-D15 G2 HBC
Motherboard: ASUS ProArt Z890-Creator WiFi
Graphics: Integrated
Chassis: Fractal Design Epoch Black TG RGB Light Tint
Storage: Crucial T710 2TB, Crucial T500 2TB
Power: Seasonic PRIME TX-1300 ATX 3.0 1300W
Operating System: Microsoft Windows 11 Pro
Compared Hardware:
- Patriot Viper Elite 5 Ultra DDR5-6000 2x48GB @ DDR5-6000 28-40-40-100
- Corsair Vengeance RGB DDR5-8400 2x24GB @ DDR5-8400 40-52-52-135
- Crucial CT2K16G64C52CU5 DDR5-6400 2x16GB @ DDR5-6400 52-52-52-103
- Crucial Pro Overclocking CL32 DDR5-6400 2x16GB @ DDR5-6400 32-40-40-103
- Kingston FURY Renegade DDR5-8400 2x24GB @ DDR5-8400 40-52-52-132
- Patriot Viper Elite 5 Ultra DDR5-6000 2x24GB @ DDR5-6000 28-40-40-100
- Patriot Viper Elite 5 Ultra DDR5-6400 2x24GB @ DDR5-6400 32-39-39-101
- Patriot Viper Elite 5 Ultra RGB DDR5-6000 2x24GB @ DDR5-6000 28-40-40-100
- XPG Lancer CUDIMM RGB DDR5-8400 2x24GB @ DDR5-8400 40-52-52-130
Page Index
1. Introduction, Packaging, Specifications
2. A Closer Look, Test System
3. Benchmark: AIDA64 CPU
4. Benchmark: AIDA64 FPU
5. Benchmark: AIDA64 Memory
6. Benchmark: PCMark 10
7. Benchmark: 3DMark
8. Benchmark: PassMark PerformanceTest 11
9. Benchmark: SuperPI 1M, Cinebench 2024
10. Overclocking and Conclusion