- IT Support
In-House vs. Outsourced IT Support: Which Is Right for Your Business?
3 Mar, 2026







£604.44 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
For £448.87 ex-VAT, this Kingston Fury 32GB 7600MT/s DDR5 kit is only really a “yes” if you’re building or upgrading for a specific high-speed tuning use case and you’re confident you’ll actually benefit. In day-to-day B2B work—VMs, Office, CAD workloads that don’t love memory bandwidth, file servers, general productivity—most of the time you won’t see a meaningful bump versus a more sensibly priced DDR5 kit. The headline speed is nice, but DDR5 pricing at the top end is where you start paying a premium for diminishing returns.
That said, I *would* consider it for gaming-focused rigs, performance workstations, or environments where you can validate stability and run the memory at XMP without drama (think: the right motherboard/BIOS support and sensible cooling). If you’re buying for a fleet of office PCs or homelab servers where uptime and predictable compatibility matter more than peak benchmarks, I’d steer you toward cheaper, mid-range DDR5—same capacity, less cost, fewer headaches.
If you tell me what platform/motherboard you’re using and the workload (virtualisation vs workstation vs gaming vs lab), I can say whether you’re paying for something you’ll genuinely feel—or whether you’re better off saving that budget for storage, a better CPU, or more balanced RAM.

Kingston
Kingston Server Premier - DDR5 - module - 96 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 5600 MT/s / PC5-44800 - CL46 - 1.1 V - registered - ECC

Kingston
Kingston FURY Beast RGB - DDR5 - module - 16 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 6000 MHz / PC5-48000 - CL30 - 1.4 V - unbuffered - 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

Qnap
QNAP - DDR4 - module - 16 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 3200 MHz / PC4-25600