
Patriot Viper Venom RGB DDR5 48GB (2x24GB) 6400MHz CL32 UDIMM Desktop Gaming Memory Kit Compatible with Intel XMP - PVVR548G640C32K
Patriot Viper Venom RGB DDR5 48GB (2x24GB) 6400MHz CL32 UDIMM Desktop Gaming Memory Kit Compatible with Intel XMP - PVVR548G640C32K has dropped 14.2% over the last 30 days, currently at £900.51.
Price last checked: 28 Mar 2026, 04:59
- Capacity: 48 GB (2 x 24 GB)
- Tested frequency profile 1: PC5-51200 (6400 MT/s)
- Timers tested: 32-40-40-84
- Overclocking function: XMP 3.0 overclocking supported
- On-Die ECC
About This Product
The Patriot Viper Venom RGB DDR5 48GB kit consists of two 24GB UDIMM modules, operating at a frequency of 6400MHz with a latency of CL32. This desktop gaming memory kit is compatible with Intel XMP and features XMP 3.0 compatible overclocking, as well as ECC On-Die. It is suitable for gamers and power users who require high-capacity and high-speed memory for demanding applications.
Near its lowest price
At £900.51, Patriot Viper Venom RGB DDR5 48GB (2x24GB) 6400MHz CL32 UDIMM Desktop Gaming Memory Kit Compatible with Intel XMP - PVVR548G640C32K is at or near its lowest tracked price of £900.51. The 30-day average is £956.85, making this a good time to buy if you've been waiting for a deal.
Price History
Similar Products

Patriot Viper Elite II DDR4 64GB(2 x 32GB) 3600MHz Kit
Updated 6h ago

Patriot Viper Elite 5 RGB DDR5 32GB (2 x 16GB) 6000MT/s Kit - PVER532G60C30KW
Updated 6h ago

Patriot Viper Venom DDR5 32GB (2 x 16GB) 6400MT/s UDIMM Desktop Gaming Memory KIT - PVV532G640C32K
Updated 6h ago

Patriot Viper Steel RGB DDR4 32GB (2 x 16GB) 3600MHz Kit - PVSR432G360C0K
Updated 5h ago
Related Articles
Why Apple pulled the 512GB Mac Studio: RAM shortage, pricing, and what buyers should do
Apple quietly removed the 512GB unified-memory Mac Studio option, and it’s a useful signal about high-end RAM supply, config strategy, and when you should (and shouldn’t) buy a maxed-out workstation.
Understanding RAM Pricing in 2026: Trends and Consumer Impact
DDR5 pricing in early 2026 is being pulled in opposite directions by falling cost-per-GB versus periodic shortages of specific IC bins, keeping popular 32GB (2x16GB) kits volatile even when headline pricing looks stable.