F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop DDR4 2133 Mhz overclocking what can I do?

DDR4 2133 Mhz overclocking what can I do?

DDR4 2133 Mhz overclocking what can I do?

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Chiller9592
Senior Member
670
03-03-2016, 09:14 PM
#1
I have a Micron Ram that runs at 2133Mhz with the Part Number: 8ATF1G64AZ-2g1A1 And a Corsair Ram that could run at 2933Mhz with the Part Number: CMK8GX4M1D3000C16 So my Problem is that the Micron Ram is holding back my Corsair Ram. So I ask how I could (if I can) overclock the Micron Ram to run at 2933Mhz. My Mainboard is a Asus A320M-K
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Chiller9592
03-03-2016, 09:14 PM #1

I have a Micron Ram that runs at 2133Mhz with the Part Number: 8ATF1G64AZ-2g1A1 And a Corsair Ram that could run at 2933Mhz with the Part Number: CMK8GX4M1D3000C16 So my Problem is that the Micron Ram is holding back my Corsair Ram. So I ask how I could (if I can) overclock the Micron Ram to run at 2933Mhz. My Mainboard is a Asus A320M-K

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doroteja999
Junior Member
44
03-22-2016, 06:34 PM
#2
The board likely can't handle 2933mhz. Try around 2667mhz manually when adjusting the DRAM frequency to check performance. GL.
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doroteja999
03-22-2016, 06:34 PM #2

The board likely can't handle 2933mhz. Try around 2667mhz manually when adjusting the DRAM frequency to check performance. GL.

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slomochris
Member
64
03-22-2016, 08:10 PM
#3
The specifications support frequencies up to 3200 MHz.
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slomochris
03-22-2016, 08:10 PM #3

The specifications support frequencies up to 3200 MHz.

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CookieMate
Junior Member
31
03-24-2016, 11:34 AM
#4
You're likely to face significant challenges in achieving higher clock speeds for these memory chips. The available options are limited, with typical speeds capped around 3000MHz at 1.3v, and scaling further is difficult. Running mixed memory types will complicate matters further. Could you confirm the second stick's model? A version number on the Corsair device should indicate the chip after decoding (version 3.30 suggests a Micron die). If it matches, speeds like 2667MHz are achievable; otherwise, 2400MHz might be the best you can expect. Overall, this project seems very demanding and unlikely to deliver substantial gains. I wouldn't recommend investing time in memory optimization for this configuration.
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CookieMate
03-24-2016, 11:34 AM #4

You're likely to face significant challenges in achieving higher clock speeds for these memory chips. The available options are limited, with typical speeds capped around 3000MHz at 1.3v, and scaling further is difficult. Running mixed memory types will complicate matters further. Could you confirm the second stick's model? A version number on the Corsair device should indicate the chip after decoding (version 3.30 suggests a Micron die). If it matches, speeds like 2667MHz are achievable; otherwise, 2400MHz might be the best you can expect. Overall, this project seems very demanding and unlikely to deliver substantial gains. I wouldn't recommend investing time in memory optimization for this configuration.

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212
03-24-2016, 05:42 PM
#5
I understand that. We're using the same board. It's designed for memory clocking. With mixed RAM, it won't work properly. Particularly on a first or second generation chip.
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cursayerdragon
03-24-2016, 05:42 PM #5

I understand that. We're using the same board. It's designed for memory clocking. With mixed RAM, it won't work properly. Particularly on a first or second generation chip.