F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Memory stability issues

Memory stability issues

Memory stability issues

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HeadphoneNinja
Junior Member
34
02-05-2026, 09:42 AM
#1
Hello, I noticed something unusual with your system. When the default XMP profile is enabled in BIOS for your memory, certain games tend to crash during gameplay. However, disabling XMP resolves the issue completely. Since you're not comfortable with overclocking and prefer maintaining the original memory timings, you're looking for a stable performance at 3600MHz. Let me know if you'd like advice on further troubleshooting or adjustments. Thanks!
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HeadphoneNinja
02-05-2026, 09:42 AM #1

Hello, I noticed something unusual with your system. When the default XMP profile is enabled in BIOS for your memory, certain games tend to crash during gameplay. However, disabling XMP resolves the issue completely. Since you're not comfortable with overclocking and prefer maintaining the original memory timings, you're looking for a stable performance at 3600MHz. Let me know if you'd like advice on further troubleshooting or adjustments. Thanks!

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DarkPhantomX
Junior Member
5
02-06-2026, 03:07 AM
#2
You can boost the DRAM voltage to 1.45V for DDR4 to enhance stability. Test it and observe the results.
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DarkPhantomX
02-06-2026, 03:07 AM #2

You can boost the DRAM voltage to 1.45V for DDR4 to enhance stability. Test it and observe the results.

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Goku_Jerome
Senior Member
428
02-20-2026, 02:34 AM
#3
I attempted adjustments in increments of 10, but encountered a blue screen each time reaching 1.45V. The error message reads: VIDEO_SCHEDULER_INTERNAL_ERROR.
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Goku_Jerome
02-20-2026, 02:34 AM #3

I attempted adjustments in increments of 10, but encountered a blue screen each time reaching 1.45V. The error message reads: VIDEO_SCHEDULER_INTERNAL_ERROR.

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sagab123
Junior Member
49
02-20-2026, 06:11 AM
#4
I checked some online resources and it seems the issue might be related to the GPU. If that’s the case, DDU could help. It’s unclear how this ties into XMP settings. Do you have any warranty coverage left for your GPU or RAM?
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sagab123
02-20-2026, 06:11 AM #4

I checked some online resources and it seems the issue might be related to the GPU. If that’s the case, DDU could help. It’s unclear how this ties into XMP settings. Do you have any warranty coverage left for your GPU or RAM?

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Krzywy
Member
150
02-20-2026, 02:41 PM
#5
Place your RAM in slots 2 and 4. Configure the SOC to 1.1 Dram at 1.35 and test with a 3200 MHz processor. If it boots, run memtest86 and OCCT for verification. If stable, proceed to 3600 MHz and repeat testing. Should you encounter crashes at 3600, consider using ddu.
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Krzywy
02-20-2026, 02:41 PM #5

Place your RAM in slots 2 and 4. Configure the SOC to 1.1 Dram at 1.35 and test with a 3200 MHz processor. If it boots, run memtest86 and OCCT for verification. If stable, proceed to 3600 MHz and repeat testing. Should you encounter crashes at 3600, consider using ddu.

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xXpGsPredXx
Member
63
02-20-2026, 09:41 PM
#6
Thank you! I'll give it a shot when I have some free time.
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xXpGsPredXx
02-20-2026, 09:41 PM #6

Thank you! I'll give it a shot when I have some free time.

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yarabi87
Member
174
02-25-2026, 03:09 PM
#7
I manually set my RAM to 3200 MHz and all issues disappeared. After running a memtest86, no errors were found. I believe I’ll stick with this setting and maybe tweak the timings slightly. Thanks for your support!
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yarabi87
02-25-2026, 03:09 PM #7

I manually set my RAM to 3200 MHz and all issues disappeared. After running a memtest86, no errors were found. I believe I’ll stick with this setting and maybe tweak the timings slightly. Thanks for your support!