F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking New to pc stuff.

New to pc stuff.

New to pc stuff.

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Stitchboy11_11
Junior Member
28
05-18-2019, 01:18 AM
#1
I just purchased a Ryzen 2400G and paired it with Corsair Vengeance 3200 speed RAM. The maximum it runs at is 2400. I’m wondering how to reach the rated 3200 speed without changing settings much. I’ve never overclocked before, this is my first PC, and I’m a bit nervous about making changes in BIOS. Could you help me so I can achieve the full speed without doing too much hassle? Also, I don’t have a GPU yet, which is why I chose the high-speed RAM.
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Stitchboy11_11
05-18-2019, 01:18 AM #1

I just purchased a Ryzen 2400G and paired it with Corsair Vengeance 3200 speed RAM. The maximum it runs at is 2400. I’m wondering how to reach the rated 3200 speed without changing settings much. I’ve never overclocked before, this is my first PC, and I’m a bit nervous about making changes in BIOS. Could you help me so I can achieve the full speed without doing too much hassle? Also, I don’t have a GPU yet, which is why I chose the high-speed RAM.

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Crazyderplays
Junior Member
10
05-18-2019, 05:19 AM
#2
Use XMP/DOCP to set RAM.
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Crazyderplays
05-18-2019, 05:19 AM #2

Use XMP/DOCP to set RAM.

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SupComCrafter
Member
243
05-18-2019, 09:59 PM
#3
Press the delete key quickly when turning on the computer to enter your BIOS. There should be an option labeled XMP. Open it and you’ll see a 3200MHz profile. Click it, save the changes, and exit. Your RAM will now operate at 3200.
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SupComCrafter
05-18-2019, 09:59 PM #3

Press the delete key quickly when turning on the computer to enter your BIOS. There should be an option labeled XMP. Open it and you’ll see a 3200MHz profile. Click it, save the changes, and exit. Your RAM will now operate at 3200.

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diamonddan24
Member
61
05-19-2019, 06:11 AM
#4
CountMike explained using XMP/DOCP for RAM settings. He mentioned using xmp at 3200 speed but noticed a drop to 2133. He also pointed out there are around 6 profiles in the bottom of the mob bios.
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diamonddan24
05-19-2019, 06:11 AM #4

CountMike explained using XMP/DOCP for RAM settings. He mentioned using xmp at 3200 speed but noticed a drop to 2133. He also pointed out there are around 6 profiles in the bottom of the mob bios.

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UnRuliness
Junior Member
42
05-19-2019, 01:41 PM
#5
Typically there are one or two XMP profiles, with the remainder being JEDEC. Such information can often be viewed in tools like CPU-Z. What memory type do you have?
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UnRuliness
05-19-2019, 01:41 PM #5

Typically there are one or two XMP profiles, with the remainder being JEDEC. Such information can often be viewed in tools like CPU-Z. What memory type do you have?

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bubalu529
Member
114
05-20-2019, 08:15 AM
#6
CountMike shared that typically there are one or two XMP profiles and the rest follows JEDEC standards. You can check them in CPU-Z, for example. What MB do you have? As a rock ab350 m pro 4mb, I’ve tried XMP but it defaults to 2133.
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bubalu529
05-20-2019, 08:15 AM #6

CountMike shared that typically there are one or two XMP profiles and the rest follows JEDEC standards. You can check them in CPU-Z, for example. What MB do you have? As a rock ab350 m pro 4mb, I’ve tried XMP but it defaults to 2133.