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RAM overclocking Asus H110M-C

RAM overclocking Asus H110M-C

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Beniboss
Member
75
07-13-2023, 04:13 PM
#1
I also have an Asus H110M-C motherboard, and the RAM speed is at 2133MHz, which isn't too bad. I'm curious if it's possible to overclock the RAM on this board.
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Beniboss
07-13-2023, 04:13 PM #1

I also have an Asus H110M-C motherboard, and the RAM speed is at 2133MHz, which isn't too bad. I'm curious if it's possible to overclock the RAM on this board.

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TrayThrone
Member
136
07-18-2023, 02:49 PM
#2
First download CPU-Z and navigate to the SPD tab; then JDEC #5 and possibly XMP will appear. Check for higher speeds and note those values or capture a picture.
(If you can take a screenshot it would be very useful)
In the BIOS, look for DRAM frequency and voltage in your favorites. Set the frequency to the maximum rated value, such as 2133 or higher depending on your RAM. The voltage should be around 1.35V, which is ideal. Also verify if your RAM includes heatsinks (this is important).
According to your explanation, you should increase timings by one except for tRC, which causes crashes.
After booting AIDA64, it should work fine. Go to the "Tools" tab and choose "Stability test," leaving all options except Stress system memory unchecked.
T
TrayThrone
07-18-2023, 02:49 PM #2

First download CPU-Z and navigate to the SPD tab; then JDEC #5 and possibly XMP will appear. Check for higher speeds and note those values or capture a picture.
(If you can take a screenshot it would be very useful)
In the BIOS, look for DRAM frequency and voltage in your favorites. Set the frequency to the maximum rated value, such as 2133 or higher depending on your RAM. The voltage should be around 1.35V, which is ideal. Also verify if your RAM includes heatsinks (this is important).
According to your explanation, you should increase timings by one except for tRC, which causes crashes.
After booting AIDA64, it should work fine. Go to the "Tools" tab and choose "Stability test," leaving all options except Stress system memory unchecked.

B
BlackJokerY
Junior Member
28
07-20-2023, 01:17 PM
#3
Increasing timings from the given example involves adjusting RAM settings manually. The target profile might be XMP for a 2400 MHz processor, requiring manual changes to both timing and voltage. Which processor model are you working with?
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BlackJokerY
07-20-2023, 01:17 PM #3

Increasing timings from the given example involves adjusting RAM settings manually. The target profile might be XMP for a 2400 MHz processor, requiring manual changes to both timing and voltage. Which processor model are you working with?

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adamgames2016
Member
133
07-20-2023, 04:36 PM
#4
Am using a I5-7500 @ 3.40Ghz
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adamgames2016
07-20-2023, 04:36 PM #4

Am using a I5-7500 @ 3.40Ghz

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Ebkon
Member
166
07-22-2023, 12:24 PM
#5
First download CPU-Z and go to SPD tab, now there will show JDEC #5 and probably XMP, look for higher speed and write those numbers down or take picture.
(if you can take screenshot it would be helpfull)
(in bios)In my favourites there should be DRAM frequency and DRAM voltage, select DRAM frequency to max probably as rated as in CPU-Z tab which is 2133 or higher, depends from your RAM, and last info is voltage set 1.35V should be good, but does your ram have heatsinks?(This is crucial info)
Now the timings as i explained up you should increase by 1, except tRC (that makes my every time crash).
After you boot AIDA64 should be good for that, go to "Tools" tab and select "Stability test" uncheck everything except Stress system memory, now im not sure for how long but i ran 15min. In aida you have cache and memory speed test and you can benchmark memory speed.
But if you wanna real way to test Ram stability download Memtest86 and make bootable drive, it should run 7 or 8 passes.
This is far as i know how to do it.
If it doesn't boot just reset CMOS or it will boot after 2 or 3 tries as it is default in bios by boot faulire guard.
Only thing that can kill your ram is heat or voltage.
Max rated and unsafe voltage should be 1.5V but DONT GO FOR THAT!
E
Ebkon
07-22-2023, 12:24 PM #5

First download CPU-Z and go to SPD tab, now there will show JDEC #5 and probably XMP, look for higher speed and write those numbers down or take picture.
(if you can take screenshot it would be helpfull)
(in bios)In my favourites there should be DRAM frequency and DRAM voltage, select DRAM frequency to max probably as rated as in CPU-Z tab which is 2133 or higher, depends from your RAM, and last info is voltage set 1.35V should be good, but does your ram have heatsinks?(This is crucial info)
Now the timings as i explained up you should increase by 1, except tRC (that makes my every time crash).
After you boot AIDA64 should be good for that, go to "Tools" tab and select "Stability test" uncheck everything except Stress system memory, now im not sure for how long but i ran 15min. In aida you have cache and memory speed test and you can benchmark memory speed.
But if you wanna real way to test Ram stability download Memtest86 and make bootable drive, it should run 7 or 8 passes.
This is far as i know how to do it.
If it doesn't boot just reset CMOS or it will boot after 2 or 3 tries as it is default in bios by boot faulire guard.
Only thing that can kill your ram is heat or voltage.
Max rated and unsafe voltage should be 1.5V but DONT GO FOR THAT!

N
NGWessel
Member
160
07-24-2023, 07:27 PM
#6
RememberThe5th :
First download CPU-Z and go to SPD tab, now there will show JDEC #5 and probably XMP, look for higher speed and write those numbers down or take picture.
(if you can take screenshot it would be helpfull)
(in bios)In my favourites there should be DRAM frequency and DRAM voltage, select DRAM frequency to max probably as rated as in CPU-Z tab which is 2133 or higher, depends from your RAM, and last info is voltage set 1.35V should be good, but does your ram have heatsinks?(This is crucial info)
Now the timings as i explained up you should increase by 1, except tRC (that makes my every time crash).
After you boot AIDA64 should be good for that, go to "Tools" tab and select "Stability test" uncheck everything except Stress system memory, now im not sure for how long but i ran 15min. In aida you have cache and memory speed test and you can benchmark memory speed.
But if you wanna real way to test Ram stability download Memtest86 and make bootable drive, it should run 7 or 8 passes.
This is far as i know how to do it.
If it doesn't boot just reset CMOS or it will boot after 2 or 3 tries as it is default in bios by boot faulire guard.
Only thing that can kill your ram is heat or voltage.
Max rated and unsafe voltage should be 1.5V but DONT GO FOR THAT!
Thnaks for your respond this is very helpful and no i don't have heatsink in my Ram
N
NGWessel
07-24-2023, 07:27 PM #6

RememberThe5th :
First download CPU-Z and go to SPD tab, now there will show JDEC #5 and probably XMP, look for higher speed and write those numbers down or take picture.
(if you can take screenshot it would be helpfull)
(in bios)In my favourites there should be DRAM frequency and DRAM voltage, select DRAM frequency to max probably as rated as in CPU-Z tab which is 2133 or higher, depends from your RAM, and last info is voltage set 1.35V should be good, but does your ram have heatsinks?(This is crucial info)
Now the timings as i explained up you should increase by 1, except tRC (that makes my every time crash).
After you boot AIDA64 should be good for that, go to "Tools" tab and select "Stability test" uncheck everything except Stress system memory, now im not sure for how long but i ran 15min. In aida you have cache and memory speed test and you can benchmark memory speed.
But if you wanna real way to test Ram stability download Memtest86 and make bootable drive, it should run 7 or 8 passes.
This is far as i know how to do it.
If it doesn't boot just reset CMOS or it will boot after 2 or 3 tries as it is default in bios by boot faulire guard.
Only thing that can kill your ram is heat or voltage.
Max rated and unsafe voltage should be 1.5V but DONT GO FOR THAT!
Thnaks for your respond this is very helpful and no i don't have heatsink in my Ram

G
gingerbrownie
Junior Member
1
07-26-2023, 05:59 PM
#7
Try to keep 1.35V it shouldn't be much heated if you have ventilation in case.
G
gingerbrownie
07-26-2023, 05:59 PM #7

Try to keep 1.35V it shouldn't be much heated if you have ventilation in case.