- Cloud Networking
Meraki MT Sensors: Environmental Monitoring for Business
18 Mar, 2026







£1513.99 inc. VAT
AI-generated summary
For £1,261.66 ex-VAT for a 96GB DDR5 kit, this is only a “yes” if you’re getting a very specific outcome and you can justify the spend. Kingston’s FURY Renegade line is typically aimed at people who want stable, high-speed DDR5 that plays nicely with XMP profiles in enthusiast/workstation boards. In the real world, though, a lot of business workloads won’t notice the difference between “fast DDR5” and “perfectly decent DDR5”—especially if you’re mostly running VMs, databases, file servers, office workloads, or general engineering software that isn’t memory-bandwidth-starved. If that’s you, you’ll get better value by buying lower-cost DDR5 at a sensible speed/capacity and putting the money into more capacity, faster storage, or better CPU cooling.
Who should buy: teams building high-performance dev boxes, render/workstation systems, or memory-sensitive compute where bandwidth and predictable XMP behaviour matter—plus you want Kingston (generally well-supported) rather than chasing compatibility quirks. Who should *not*: cautious IT teams standardising fleets, or anything where “overclock-ish tuning” (even via XMP) is a risk to uptime—because at these prices, the ROI has to be real. If you’re unsure, sanity-check your motherboard’s official support for that exact kit and speed profile, and compare against cheaper kits that still hit reliable XMP with the same capacity. If it only meets “fast” expectations on paper and you don’t have workloads that benefit, this is a hard sell.

Kingston
Kingston FURY Beast - DDR5 - kit - 128 GB: 4 x 32 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 5200 MT/s / PC5-41600 - CL40 - 1.25 V - on-die ECC

Kingston
Kingston FURY Renegade - DDR5 - kit - 32 GB - DIMM 288-pin - 7200 MT/s / PC5-57600 - CL38 - 1.45 V - on-die ECC

Kingston
8GB 1600MHz DDR3L Non-ECC CL11 DIMM 1.35V

HP
HP - DDR5 - module - 16 GB - SO-DIMM 262-pin - 5600 MHz / PC5-44800 - non-ECC - for Workstation Z2 G9