F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop A potential confusion regarding RAM clock speeds.

A potential confusion regarding RAM clock speeds.

A potential confusion regarding RAM clock speeds.

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houweling
Junior Member
16
10-01-2023, 05:33 PM
#1
You're asking if adding higher-speed RAM sticks would conflict with your motherboard's built-in speed limit. The MAG Mortar B560M caps RAM speeds at 2666 MHz, so even with faster sticks, they won't exceed that maximum. It shouldn't cause issues or damage as long as the system stays within its limits.
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houweling
10-01-2023, 05:33 PM #1

You're asking if adding higher-speed RAM sticks would conflict with your motherboard's built-in speed limit. The MAG Mortar B560M caps RAM speeds at 2666 MHz, so even with faster sticks, they won't exceed that maximum. It shouldn't cause issues or damage as long as the system stays within its limits.

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Kay0807
Junior Member
3
10-01-2023, 06:16 PM
#2
When you refer to damage, are you talking about physical harm to components like your GPU or RAM? Those situations rarely occur. Your new RAM would operate at the lowest available speed, which is 2666 MHz. That standard label means your RAM could reach up to 3200 MHz if you enable XMP profiles on its own. If you already have 32GB, do you require additional storage? Extra RAM won’t help unless you truly need more capacity.
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Kay0807
10-01-2023, 06:16 PM #2

When you refer to damage, are you talking about physical harm to components like your GPU or RAM? Those situations rarely occur. Your new RAM would operate at the lowest available speed, which is 2666 MHz. That standard label means your RAM could reach up to 3200 MHz if you enable XMP profiles on its own. If you already have 32GB, do you require additional storage? Extra RAM won’t help unless you truly need more capacity.

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_MLGOrange_
Junior Member
13
10-01-2023, 08:00 PM
#3
I'm not sure I'd say I need it—I might only be thinking about mods for Minecraft, not much else. It's more of an unwanted thought taking over. Yeah, I meant it could cause real harm, like damaging the RAM. But it's comforting to know that if those thoughts win, the risk is mainly financial, not hardware damage. Thanks for clarifying. Personally, I avoid OC because I can't justify it to myself.
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_MLGOrange_
10-01-2023, 08:00 PM #3

I'm not sure I'd say I need it—I might only be thinking about mods for Minecraft, not much else. It's more of an unwanted thought taking over. Yeah, I meant it could cause real harm, like damaging the RAM. But it's comforting to know that if those thoughts win, the risk is mainly financial, not hardware damage. Thanks for clarifying. Personally, I avoid OC because I can't justify it to myself.

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OPshooter
Junior Member
4
10-02-2023, 01:53 AM
#4
No, I don't have access to your BIOS settings. Please check your system's documentation or manufacturer's website for information about enabling XMP.
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OPshooter
10-02-2023, 01:53 AM #4

No, I don't have access to your BIOS settings. Please check your system's documentation or manufacturer's website for information about enabling XMP.

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trigger_fourth
Junior Member
27
10-18-2023, 05:54 PM
#5
I’m not sure if it’s supported at all, but it doesn’t seem to work with my current setup. It wouldn’t be an issue for me, though—I’d rather avoid making changes altogether since they could complicate things further.
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trigger_fourth
10-18-2023, 05:54 PM #5

I’m not sure if it’s supported at all, but it doesn’t seem to work with my current setup. It wouldn’t be an issue for me, though—I’d rather avoid making changes altogether since they could complicate things further.

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GangsterBoss
Junior Member
26
10-21-2023, 07:42 AM
#6
The memory operates at 2133 MHz, which is the standard for DDR4 configurations.
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GangsterBoss
10-21-2023, 07:42 AM #6

The memory operates at 2133 MHz, which is the standard for DDR4 configurations.

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SrWaldo_22
Member
239
10-21-2023, 08:33 AM
#7
Base reached a maximum of 2666
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SrWaldo_22
10-21-2023, 08:33 AM #7

Base reached a maximum of 2666

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xXitzZaidXx
Junior Member
12
10-28-2023, 12:35 PM
#8
After some time, I revisited the problem and managed to install the SSD into a PCIe M.2 SATA adapter. Through a few adjustments, it seemed sufficient to resolve the issue. It appears the device needed direct insertion rather than booting from it. The M.2 SSD docks available at work only support NVMe, not M.2 SATA models. I’ll post an update in case anyone needs assistance with this setup in the future.
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xXitzZaidXx
10-28-2023, 12:35 PM #8

After some time, I revisited the problem and managed to install the SSD into a PCIe M.2 SATA adapter. Through a few adjustments, it seemed sufficient to resolve the issue. It appears the device needed direct insertion rather than booting from it. The M.2 SSD docks available at work only support NVMe, not M.2 SATA models. I’ll post an update in case anyone needs assistance with this setup in the future.