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Overclocking Ram And Cpu

Overclocking Ram And Cpu

K
kaire2015
Member
232
09-17-2017, 02:16 AM
#1
Hello everyone, I was wondering if it's feasible to increase the overclock of the Ryzen 5 1600 to 3.6ghz. This is the boost clock setting I've been trying to reach, but the system keeps restarting after I try to overclock and then I have to reset the CMOS. Also, the RAM is running at 1054MHz instead of the factory 3000MHz. I haven't adjusted the CPU voltages and my PSU is a Seasonic Focus Gold 550W. The motherboard is an Asrock AB350 Pro4, the RAM is G.Skill Aegis 8GB DDR4-3000MHz (F4-3000C16S-8GISB), and the GPU is RX 580 with 8GB at stock speed.
K
kaire2015
09-17-2017, 02:16 AM #1

Hello everyone, I was wondering if it's feasible to increase the overclock of the Ryzen 5 1600 to 3.6ghz. This is the boost clock setting I've been trying to reach, but the system keeps restarting after I try to overclock and then I have to reset the CMOS. Also, the RAM is running at 1054MHz instead of the factory 3000MHz. I haven't adjusted the CPU voltages and my PSU is a Seasonic Focus Gold 550W. The motherboard is an Asrock AB350 Pro4, the RAM is G.Skill Aegis 8GB DDR4-3000MHz (F4-3000C16S-8GISB), and the GPU is RX 580 with 8GB at stock speed.

X
XxRedxBulletxX
Junior Member
31
09-25-2017, 02:07 PM
#2
There are variations in how certain software interprets RAM speeds. DDR means Double Data Rate, but many programs simply grab the BIOS data without actually measuring the RAM. As a result, you might see the RAM listed at 2133MHz. Other applications, such as cpu-z, check and display the actual data rate, which for DDR4 should be around @1067MHz (±). You won't find 3000MHz unless you adjust the default RAM speed settings to xmp/docp for optimal performance. This adjustment is meant to be automatic, though some RAM modules might not need manual optimization and could settle at 2933MHz. You might also experiment with adjusting the voltage or CPU settings. Research online about optimizing Ryzen and RAM.
X
XxRedxBulletxX
09-25-2017, 02:07 PM #2

There are variations in how certain software interprets RAM speeds. DDR means Double Data Rate, but many programs simply grab the BIOS data without actually measuring the RAM. As a result, you might see the RAM listed at 2133MHz. Other applications, such as cpu-z, check and display the actual data rate, which for DDR4 should be around @1067MHz (±). You won't find 3000MHz unless you adjust the default RAM speed settings to xmp/docp for optimal performance. This adjustment is meant to be automatic, though some RAM modules might not need manual optimization and could settle at 2933MHz. You might also experiment with adjusting the voltage or CPU settings. Research online about optimizing Ryzen and RAM.

V
Velizar06
Posting Freak
865
09-26-2017, 01:24 PM
#3
The reason for instability is that I didn't adjust the voltages on the CPU. Your RAM operates at 2133MHz, which is the starting/base frequency for DDR4, and you must configure XMP/DOCP to operate at maximum speed. The PSU should be sufficient.
V
Velizar06
09-26-2017, 01:24 PM #3

The reason for instability is that I didn't adjust the voltages on the CPU. Your RAM operates at 2133MHz, which is the starting/base frequency for DDR4, and you must configure XMP/DOCP to operate at maximum speed. The PSU should be sufficient.

L
laugh0305
Junior Member
40
09-27-2017, 04:32 PM
#4
There are variations in how certain software interprets RAM speeds. DDR means Double Data Rate, but many programs simply grab the BIOS data without actually measuring the RAM. As a result, you might see the RAM listed at 2133MHz. Other applications, such as cpu-z, check the actual data rate, which for DDR4 should display around @1067MHz (±). You won’t find 3000MHz unless you adjust the default RAM speed settings to xmp/docp for peak performance. This adjustment is meant to be automatic, though some RAM modules might not need manual optimization and could settle at 2933MHz. You might also experiment with adjusting the voltage or CPU settings. Research online about optimizing Ryzen and RAM.
L
laugh0305
09-27-2017, 04:32 PM #4

There are variations in how certain software interprets RAM speeds. DDR means Double Data Rate, but many programs simply grab the BIOS data without actually measuring the RAM. As a result, you might see the RAM listed at 2133MHz. Other applications, such as cpu-z, check the actual data rate, which for DDR4 should display around @1067MHz (±). You won’t find 3000MHz unless you adjust the default RAM speed settings to xmp/docp for peak performance. This adjustment is meant to be automatic, though some RAM modules might not need manual optimization and could settle at 2933MHz. You might also experiment with adjusting the voltage or CPU settings. Research online about optimizing Ryzen and RAM.

I
209
09-27-2017, 05:57 PM
#5
OK thanks alot guys !
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IninhaGamer_BR
09-27-2017, 05:57 PM #5

OK thanks alot guys !