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Ok, so it won't hinder my abilities to get to 4.5ghz or more correct?
I actually have the same board and processor, awesome combo. 1333Mhz is on the low-end of the spectrum and you're going to take a performance hit with it. How much will just depend on what app/game you're running. Personally I'd go with something in the 1866-2400 range (you'll get diminishing returns due latency/price beyond that).
definitely keep it...
did you know what the hell are you talking about?... blah blah blah.
Since you're getting an unlocked CPU, the RAM will have absolutely no bearing on being able to overclock to 4.5ghz--it's all in the CPU multiplier.
Totally WRONG. Sorry.
With Haswell, when you start to really push it, the RAM speeds can and will hold back your CPU core overclock. Read guides on Haswell overclocking, it's well documented. Stock clocked Haswell on an Asus Hero will hold 2666mhz by design. But overclock the CPU and it's down to the silicon integrity of the IMC as to whether or not it'll hold that higher ram speed.
Also, please be aware that, technically speaking, ANYTHING over 1600mhz is 'overclocking' and not officially supported by Intel.
As an example, with my Kingston 2666mhz ram, I can only run it at 2500mhz (through alot of tweaking/fiddling) whilst at 4.8ghz on the cpu (4.7ghz cache/imc).
Those memory benchmarks identify RAM bottlenecks in an absolute sense across different speeds. They don't have anything to do with CPU overclocking. That's what the OP was asking about--whether their choice in RAM will prevent them from reaching 4.5GHz (with an unlocked CPU). Of course in benchmarks involving memory, you'll see a difference between 1333 and 1600 and 1866. But that's not what they were asking. I'm not saying that they should use 1333 RAM. I'm saying that it will have no impact on being able to OC an unlocked CPU. Temperatures might. Native RAM module speed won't when you're using the CPU multiplier.http://www.anandtech.com/show/7364/memory-scaling-on-haswell/8
1333 WILL bottleneck a system. How much depends on the system and the program but if you look at that link it's up to 30%. 1600mhz should be the absolute minimum standard nowadays. 1866mhz+ is optimum. Even lose timing 2133 ram performs better than tight timing 1600 in most cases. Considering the difference in price now (mine was literally the exact same price as 1866 cas9) you'd be crazy to not grab something fast.