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Best SO-DIMM RAM for Intel Core Ultra 9 285HX laptops?

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Hey everyone! I’m planning to pick up one of the new high-end laptops featuring the Intel Core Ultra 9 285HX, and I really want to maximize its potential right out of the gate. Since this chip is a total powerhouse, I’m looking to upgrade the stock memory to something faster and more reliable for heavy video editing and some high-end gaming.

I’ve been looking into the specs, and I know these new chips have great memory controller improvements, but I'm a bit torn on which SO-DIMM kits actually play nice with the 285HX architecture. I’m specifically looking for a 64GB kit (2x32GB) and I’m curious if it’s worth pushing for higher frequencies like 5600MT/s or even 6400MT/s if the BIOS allows it. My main concern is finding a kit with low latency (CL timings) that won't cause stability issues during long rendering sessions.

Has anyone had experience with the latest Kingston FURY Impact or Corsair Vengeance lines on this specific platform yet? I’m trying to avoid any 'silicon lottery' headaches. What is currently considered the 'gold standard' SO-DIMM RAM kit for squeezing every bit of performance out of an Intel Core Ultra 9 285HX system?


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11

yo! Late to the party but I went through this last year when I was trying to max out my previous rig. honestly, I'm a total stickler for stability cuz there is NOTHING worse than a BSOD during a 4-hour render, right??

Just sharing my experience: I tried pushing for those ultra-high frequency kits and it was just a headache. I ended up swapping back to a more conservative setup that was WAY cheaper and basically performed the same in real-world tasks.

1. I eventually settled on the Kingston FURY Impact 64GB (2x32GB) 5600MT/s DDR5 CL40 SODIMM kit. It's usually around $180-$200 and it’s been rock solid for me!!
2. I also looked at the Crucial RAM 64GB Kit (2x32GB) DDR5 5600MHz CL46 SODIMM which is even more budget-friendly (often under $170) and seriously reliable if you dont care about flashy heat spreaders.
3. tbh I think 6400MT/s is lowkey overkill unless ur doing very specific benchmarks.

I mean, the 285HX is amazing, but definitely watch out for those timings! gl! 👍


10

sooo I've been tinkering with high-end laptops for like a decade now and honestly, you don't always gotta spend a fortune to get top-tier stability for video editing. For your 285HX build, I'd say skip the crazy expensive 6400MT/s kits... the performance gains are lowkey tiny compared to the stability risks during long renders.

I recently grabbed the Kingston FURY Impact 64GB (2x32GB) 5600MT/s DDR5 CL40 SODIMM and it's been rock solid. It's usually way cheaper than the Corsair stuff, like maybe $180-200 depending on the sale. If you wanna compare, the Corsair Vengeance 64GB (2x32GB) DDR5 5600MT/s CL40 SODIMM is also great, but basically does the same thing for more cash. Option A (Kingston) is my pick cuz it just works without BIOS headaches. Option B (Corsair) is fine too, but why pay more?? Honestly, sticking to 5600MT/s is the gold standard for avoiding that silicon lottery mess. gl with the new beast! 👍


5

> skip the crazy expensive 6400MT/s kits... the performance gains are lowkey tiny compared to the stability

Totally agree with the above! Honestly, pushing for max speed on a laptop is pretty risky cuz of the heat. If ur looking for the gold standard that just works, I've been super happy with the Kingston FURY Impact 64GB (2x32GB) 5600MT/s DDR5 CL40 SODIMM. It's basically the safest bet for stability during long renders and it's way cheaper than those niche 6400 kits. Just stick to 5600MT/s—the 285HX is already a beast anyway lol.


3

Respectfully, I'd consider another option if you're serious about long-term stability for those heavy rendering sessions. Everyone's playing it super safe with 5200MT/s, but honestly, the Kingston FURY Impact 64GB (2x32GB) 5600MT/s DDR5 CL40 SODIMM is the true sweet spot for the 285HX.

I've seen people recommend playing it safe, but 5600MT/s is actually the native JEDEC speed for many of these high-end mobile chips anyway—so it's not even "overclocking" per se. It's just getting what you paid for! While some suggest the Corsair kits mentioned earlier, I've found Kingston's Plug N Play feature is way more reliable for BIOS that don't let you tweak XMP profiles. You basically just pop them in and they *actually* run at the advertised speed without you having to mess with anything. For video editing, that extra bandwidth definitely helps when scrubbing through 4K timelines. Just make sure your cooling is solid cuz these 285HX chips run HOT lol.


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