F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop My X399 AORUS Gaming 7 (version 1.0) functions properly with 128GB of memory as of October 1, 2017.

My X399 AORUS Gaming 7 (version 1.0) functions properly with 128GB of memory as of October 1, 2017.

My X399 AORUS Gaming 7 (version 1.0) functions properly with 128GB of memory as of October 1, 2017.

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Laith
Junior Member
7
04-05-2016, 05:09 PM
#1
Recent updates indicate BIOS version F3d with memory interleaving enabled in Channel mode contributed to system stability. Further details will be added if more information becomes available. A September 19 update notes replacing the 980Ti with a Quadro K1200 made full memory visibility possible in BIOS, while disabling the built-in WiFi adapter in Windows helped achieve stable booting on 128GB RAM. The System Control Panel now displays the complete 128GB availability. Later attempts to install Ubuntu nightly encountered persistent PCI Express errors related to the WiFi adapter. A post references a Gigabyte forum thread discussing this issue, suggesting a widespread problem with filling all DIMM slots with 16GB modules. Windows 10 reports 128GB total but only 95.9GB usable due to instability. The author advises against using AORUS Gaming 7 for systems with 128GB RAM and mentions the F2 BIOS remains relevant.
L
Laith
04-05-2016, 05:09 PM #1

Recent updates indicate BIOS version F3d with memory interleaving enabled in Channel mode contributed to system stability. Further details will be added if more information becomes available. A September 19 update notes replacing the 980Ti with a Quadro K1200 made full memory visibility possible in BIOS, while disabling the built-in WiFi adapter in Windows helped achieve stable booting on 128GB RAM. The System Control Panel now displays the complete 128GB availability. Later attempts to install Ubuntu nightly encountered persistent PCI Express errors related to the WiFi adapter. A post references a Gigabyte forum thread discussing this issue, suggesting a widespread problem with filling all DIMM slots with 16GB modules. Windows 10 reports 128GB total but only 95.9GB usable due to instability. The author advises against using AORUS Gaming 7 for systems with 128GB RAM and mentions the F2 BIOS remains relevant.

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danielskyj
Member
173
04-12-2016, 09:24 PM
#2
Yes, the core voltage can be a bit high for a Threadripper.
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danielskyj
04-12-2016, 09:24 PM #2

Yes, the core voltage can be a bit high for a Threadripper.

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choppchopp
Member
156
04-14-2016, 02:18 PM
#3
It seems the system defaults to 1.2V in BIOS, but the manual shows 1.4V. That difference might be a bug. I'm testing with 96GB and still see 95.9 GB available, even after running MemTest.
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choppchopp
04-14-2016, 02:18 PM #3

It seems the system defaults to 1.2V in BIOS, but the manual shows 1.4V. That difference might be a bug. I'm testing with 96GB and still see 95.9 GB available, even after running MemTest.

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jackyvb27
Junior Member
40
04-16-2016, 02:07 PM
#4
I've never seen this issue outside of 32-bit operating systems trying to use a lot of memory, especially given that both the BIOS and MemTest agree that it's an abnormal value instead of 96 or 128GB. Do you have any sources for that?
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jackyvb27
04-16-2016, 02:07 PM #4

I've never seen this issue outside of 32-bit operating systems trying to use a lot of memory, especially given that both the BIOS and MemTest agree that it's an abnormal value instead of 96 or 128GB. Do you have any sources for that?

O
oOEmmaOo
Posting Freak
818
04-18-2016, 05:34 PM
#5
Nejpovidom, upgradera dryver.
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oOEmmaOo
04-18-2016, 05:34 PM #5

Nejpovidom, upgradera dryver.

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Tazbrezzul
Junior Member
12
04-22-2016, 01:40 PM
#6
It's disappointing to see Gigabyte not meeting expectations for the Zen platform. It's surprising given their past use with older K8 and Phenom setups.
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Tazbrezzul
04-22-2016, 01:40 PM #6

It's disappointing to see Gigabyte not meeting expectations for the Zen platform. It's surprising given their past use with older K8 and Phenom setups.

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dubdub112
Member
202
04-28-2016, 09:51 PM
#7
95.9 is acceptable compared to 96. The difference from 128 is irrelevant. Generally, the limit is set at 96GB.
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dubdub112
04-28-2016, 09:51 PM #7

95.9 is acceptable compared to 96. The difference from 128 is irrelevant. Generally, the limit is set at 96GB.

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gameraloguapo
Member
198
04-29-2016, 06:39 AM
#8
I've never encountered anything similar before. The system becomes unstable when I use the final portion of memory with 96GB installed, indicating a problem.
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gameraloguapo
04-29-2016, 06:39 AM #8

I've never encountered anything similar before. The system becomes unstable when I use the final portion of memory with 96GB installed, indicating a problem.

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Texas1047
Posting Freak
889
05-03-2016, 05:06 AM
#9
The board costs close to $400, and you're curious about its quality.
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Texas1047
05-03-2016, 05:06 AM #9

The board costs close to $400, and you're curious about its quality.

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ThomGamer045
Member
157
05-03-2016, 06:41 AM
#10
I'm really frustrated. No update from Gigabyte either. My Asus board was already bad—there was a problem with the Foxconn screw—and now it's worse. Please do your part. Edit: Received a reply. They recommended re-seating the CPU, but that didn't help. I had only 96GB installed, then added another 32GB and swapped in a Quadro K1200 card instead of the 980Ti. Now the BIOS shows 128GB, but Windows 10 crashes right after login, claiming it tried to write to read-only memory.
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ThomGamer045
05-03-2016, 06:41 AM #10

I'm really frustrated. No update from Gigabyte either. My Asus board was already bad—there was a problem with the Foxconn screw—and now it's worse. Please do your part. Edit: Received a reply. They recommended re-seating the CPU, but that didn't help. I had only 96GB installed, then added another 32GB and swapped in a Quadro K1200 card instead of the 980Ti. Now the BIOS shows 128GB, but Windows 10 crashes right after login, claiming it tried to write to read-only memory.

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