Kingston FURY and Kingston memory product line

MT/s vs MHz: A Better Measure for Memory Speed

What is MHz?

MHz is short for megahertz and means a million cycles per second, or one million hertz (106 Hz). This unit of frequency measurement comes from the International System of Units, and in computing is used to denote the speed at which data moves within and between components.

When SDRAM (Synchronous Dynamic Random Access Memory) was introduced in the late 1990s, data transfer speed was measured in sync with the motherboard clock, with data transfers happening on the rising edge of the clock cycle. When measuring performance for SDRAM memory, 100MHz indicated 100 x 106 data transfers per clock cycle.

In the early 2000s, DDR (Double Data Rate) SDRAM memory was introduced. This memory technology doubled the number of data transfers per clock cycle, with transfers happening on the rising and falling edges of the cycle.

The unit of measurement however did not change. With a clock rate of 100MHz, DDR doubled the effective data rate at 200 million data transfers with each clock cycle. A new, more accurate description was long overdue.

What is MT/s?

MT/s is short for megatransfers (or million transfers) per second and is a more accurate measurement for the effective data rate (speed) of DDR SDRAM memory in computing.

Example:

SDRAM
Clock: 100MHz
Transfer Rate: 100MT/s
Bandwidth: 800MB/s

DDR SDRAM
Clock: 100MHz
Transfer Rate: 200MT/s
Bandwidth: 1600MB/s

A diagram showing where the data transfers are happening on the clock cycle comparing SDRAM and DDR SDRAM data

Kingston Product Finder

When you start with Kingston, choosing memory is easy.
With over 35 years of expertise, Kingston has the knowledge and resources you need to choose memory with confidence.

Search by System/Device

Simply enter the make and model number or system part number of the computer system or digital device to find the Kingston products you need.

Search by Part Number

Search by either the Kingston part number, distributor part number or manufacturer equivalent part number.

DDR5 Resources

Learn more about Memory