- Cyber Security
The Five Technical Controls of Cyber Essentials Explained
2 Jun, 2026







£309.38 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
Kingston’s FURY Beast DDR5 16GB 6000MT/s CL30 kit looks like a solid “get it working fast and stay stable” option—especially if you’re building around an AMD AM5 platform. The EXPO tuning matters in real life: it saves you time in BIOS fiddling and, in my experience, kits like this tend to hit their rated speeds more consistently than no-name DDR5. For £230.70 ex‑VAT for a 32GB kit (2x16), it’s reasonably priced for the performance tier, and CL30 is the kind of latency you actually feel in memory-sensitive workloads (CAD, engineering tools, some virtualisation, and heavy browser/IDE multitasking).
That said, I’d be slightly cautious about *expectations* if your use is mostly Office/Teams/accounting—this is overkill money for day-to-day business apps. Also, if you’re on Intel (or an AMD board with a tricky memory controller / less mature BIOS), you might end up running it below the headline speed even if it still works fine. Overall: buy this if you want a dependable DDR5 upgrade for an AM5 workstation/gaming rig where performance per pound matters. Don’t buy it if you just need “more RAM” and don’t care about speed/latency—there are usually better-value kits for that.

Kingston
Kingston FURY Renegade Pro - DDR5 - kit - 64 GB: 4 x 16 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 6400 MT/s / PC5-51200 - CL32 - 1.4 V - registered - on-die ECC - black

Kingston
Kingston FURY Renegade - DDR5 - module - 16 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 7600 MT/s / PC5-60800 - CL38 - 1.45 V - unbuffered - on-die ECC - white & silver

Kingston
Kingston - DDR4 - module - 16 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 2666 MHz / PC4-21300 - CL19 - 1.2 V - registered - ECC

Kingston
Kingston - DDR4 - module - 32 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 3200 MHz / PC4-25600 - CL22 - 1.2 V - registered - ECC