F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Ram help

Ram help

Ram help

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ninjaboy_1234
Member
78
09-10-2016, 01:02 PM
#1
I installed a modest CPU upgrade and paired it with a solid motherboard. During a benchmark test, my Corsair Vengeance 2 16 GB RAM appeared to be underperforming compared to typical averages. Was there any BIOS setting or configuration that might be restricting its performance?
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ninjaboy_1234
09-10-2016, 01:02 PM #1

I installed a modest CPU upgrade and paired it with a solid motherboard. During a benchmark test, my Corsair Vengeance 2 16 GB RAM appeared to be underperforming compared to typical averages. Was there any BIOS setting or configuration that might be restricting its performance?

M
mondoelite
Member
154
09-17-2016, 12:08 PM
#2
Perhaps the XMP settings aren't being implemented.
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mondoelite
09-17-2016, 12:08 PM #2

Perhaps the XMP settings aren't being implemented.

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master_scope
Posting Freak
794
09-17-2016, 12:15 PM
#3
Looking for detailed specs: old and new CPU models, compatible motherboard, and precise memory speed requirements. It seems XMP isn’t active, but additional details would be helpful.
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master_scope
09-17-2016, 12:15 PM #3

Looking for detailed specs: old and new CPU models, compatible motherboard, and precise memory speed requirements. It seems XMP isn’t active, but additional details would be helpful.

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kiddswagg_760
Member
211
09-17-2016, 05:37 PM
#4
Ensure your RAM modules are placed in the farthest slot from the CPU, then the next one with a gap. It should appear like this: (CPU) [0][X][0][X]. This means install RAM in slots A2 and B2. For some issues with XMP compatibility when using A1 and B1 (positions 1 and 3), try enabling DOCP in the BIOS settings instead of just adjusting memory frequency. On ASUS or ROG boards, this setting is usually found near the memory frequency section in the BIOS.
K
kiddswagg_760
09-17-2016, 05:37 PM #4

Ensure your RAM modules are placed in the farthest slot from the CPU, then the next one with a gap. It should appear like this: (CPU) [0][X][0][X]. This means install RAM in slots A2 and B2. For some issues with XMP compatibility when using A1 and B1 (positions 1 and 3), try enabling DOCP in the BIOS settings instead of just adjusting memory frequency. On ASUS or ROG boards, this setting is usually found near the memory frequency section in the BIOS.

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alevy3131
Member
156
10-03-2016, 08:16 PM
#5
Review the instructions carefully. Although A2 B2 works fine for most boards with four slots, sometimes the reverse is the case. In some situations, it doesn’t really matter because of the board layout. Also, the question left out by @RONOTHAN## was about where to find these numbers. In tools like CPU-Z and Speccy, they display effective bandwidth, which is typically half the actual speed. For example, 1600MT/s on a 3200MHz board isn’t an error—it reflects its real performance. That ‘D’ in DDR stands for Double Data Rate.
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alevy3131
10-03-2016, 08:16 PM #5

Review the instructions carefully. Although A2 B2 works fine for most boards with four slots, sometimes the reverse is the case. In some situations, it doesn’t really matter because of the board layout. Also, the question left out by @RONOTHAN## was about where to find these numbers. In tools like CPU-Z and Speccy, they display effective bandwidth, which is typically half the actual speed. For example, 1600MT/s on a 3200MHz board isn’t an error—it reflects its real performance. That ‘D’ in DDR stands for Double Data Rate.