- Azure Cloud
How to Back Up Azure Virtual Machines
1 Aug, 2025







£1121.78 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
At £825.20 ex‑VAT for a 64GB DDR5 kit, the Kingston FURY Beast here is *only* a good deal if you’ve already priced the alternatives and you’re buying into the Kingston ecosystem for a reason (or your workload specifically benefits and you’ve been burned on compatibility before). In most UK B2B scenarios—servers with stable platform requirements, general workstation fleets, CAD/VMs that don’t live and die by marginal RAM latency—memory is usually a commodity. If your use case isn’t extremely performance-sensitive, that price looks more “premium branding” than “practical IT budget win.”
That said, it *can* make sense for enthusiasts and performance-leaning workstation builds: high-load engineering systems, content creation boxes, or labs running memory-heavy workloads where stable DDR5 at high speeds matters and you want something reputable. It’s also a reasonable choice if you need an EXPO setup and want the kit to be straightforward rather than playing compatibility roulette. I’d still recommend you sanity-check the platform’s QVL/validated memory list and confirm your motherboard/CPU actually supports that profile—otherwise you’ll pay premium money for the ability to run slower timings, which kind of defeats the point. If you’re building cost-conscious business machines, I’d look harder at similar-capacity DDR5 kits from other reputable vendors before committing.

Kingston
Kingston FURY Beast RGB - DDR5 - kit - 16 GB: 2 x 8 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 5200 MT/s / PC5-41600 - CL40 - 1.25 V - unbuffered - on-die ECC - white

Epson
Epson memory/256MB DDRAM 333

HP
HP - DDR5 - module - 16 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 4800 MHz - unbuffered - ECC - for Workstation Z2 G9

Qnap
QNAP - DDR4 - module - 32 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 3200 MHz / PC4-25600 - ECC