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Danilo_Guto
Member
128
02-07-2016, 01:37 PM
#11
It shows 937 MHz, but the BIOS lists 1866 MHz. That’s a big difference—could there be a misunderstanding about the device or settings?
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Danilo_Guto
02-07-2016, 01:37 PM #11

It shows 937 MHz, but the BIOS lists 1866 MHz. That’s a big difference—could there be a misunderstanding about the device or settings?

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Atoll396
Member
149
02-07-2016, 02:17 PM
#12
Indicates a clock speed of 933 MHz, with an actual performance of around 1866 MHz (or 1866 MT/s). Since DDR memory supports dual data rates, its real speed is effectively twice the base frequency.
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Atoll396
02-07-2016, 02:17 PM #12

Indicates a clock speed of 933 MHz, with an actual performance of around 1866 MHz (or 1866 MT/s). Since DDR memory supports dual data rates, its real speed is effectively twice the base frequency.

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mcouey
Junior Member
46
02-07-2016, 04:01 PM
#13
Yes, it is good.
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mcouey
02-07-2016, 04:01 PM #13

Yes, it is good.

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goolst2003
Member
217
02-09-2016, 12:58 AM
#14
It's a reasonable pace for DDR3 memory. The highest speed you can buy right now is 2133 MT/s, which translates to an effective clock of 2133 MHz or a real clock of 1066 MHz. The next level is 1866 MT/s (about 933 MHz). ~Note: CPU-Z indicates you're using single-channel memory. For improved performance, consider a second identical stick to enable dual-channel operation.
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goolst2003
02-09-2016, 12:58 AM #14

It's a reasonable pace for DDR3 memory. The highest speed you can buy right now is 2133 MT/s, which translates to an effective clock of 2133 MHz or a real clock of 1066 MHz. The next level is 1866 MT/s (about 933 MHz). ~Note: CPU-Z indicates you're using single-channel memory. For improved performance, consider a second identical stick to enable dual-channel operation.

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AppleFighter
Member
76
02-09-2016, 03:36 AM
#15
You can try increasing the speed beyond 1866 MHz, but it depends on your motherboard and chipset capabilities. Check the specifications of your system to see what frequencies are supported. It’s best to stay within safe limits to avoid damage.
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AppleFighter
02-09-2016, 03:36 AM #15

You can try increasing the speed beyond 1866 MHz, but it depends on your motherboard and chipset capabilities. Check the specifications of your system to see what frequencies are supported. It’s best to stay within safe limits to avoid damage.

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louie018
Posting Freak
824
02-12-2016, 03:30 PM
#16
Looking at your setup, you're aiming to boost your RAM speed via an older BIOS. For the memory clock, your current setting is 1860 MHz (double 933 MHz). You have two targets: 2133 MHz or 2400 MHz. Consider the stability and compatibility of each option with your motherboard and BIOS version. Also, check if increasing the clock speed will actually improve performance or just cause instability. Don’t forget to verify voltage requirements and ensure your RAM supports the new frequency.
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louie018
02-12-2016, 03:30 PM #16

Looking at your setup, you're aiming to boost your RAM speed via an older BIOS. For the memory clock, your current setting is 1860 MHz (double 933 MHz). You have two targets: 2133 MHz or 2400 MHz. Consider the stability and compatibility of each option with your motherboard and BIOS version. Also, check if increasing the clock speed will actually improve performance or just cause instability. Don’t forget to verify voltage requirements and ensure your RAM supports the new frequency.

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TwaniPlays
Junior Member
44
02-12-2016, 10:19 PM
#17
I don't recommend you to OC RAM unless you're willing to spent days doing it and doing your own research. It's the most complicated thing to OC and requires a lot of propper testing to avoid data corruption on your drives otherwise you may lose all your files quite easily even if your OC appears to work. Besides that... 1866MT/s is quite good for DDR3 and there is little to no benefit from pushing it any further. RAM clock is closely tied with RAM latency as well so having faster clock doesn't mean you will have faster RAM if you will need to increase the latency as well.
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TwaniPlays
02-12-2016, 10:19 PM #17

I don't recommend you to OC RAM unless you're willing to spent days doing it and doing your own research. It's the most complicated thing to OC and requires a lot of propper testing to avoid data corruption on your drives otherwise you may lose all your files quite easily even if your OC appears to work. Besides that... 1866MT/s is quite good for DDR3 and there is little to no benefit from pushing it any further. RAM clock is closely tied with RAM latency as well so having faster clock doesn't mean you will have faster RAM if you will need to increase the latency as well.

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Redstoner137
Posting Freak
811
02-14-2016, 11:14 PM
#18
I've already shared my question about the method, and I hope no one tells me how to do it since I think I'll figure it out myself xd
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Redstoner137
02-14-2016, 11:14 PM #18

I've already shared my question about the method, and I hope no one tells me how to do it since I think I'll figure it out myself xd

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Melkim
Junior Member
9
02-28-2016, 01:47 AM
#19
Doubling your sticks for dual channel would significantly boost performance more than any overclocking effort. Dual channel halves memory bandwidth. Even with full 2400 MT/s, the gain would be only about 28%, which usually means higher CAS latency and voltage increases.
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Melkim
02-28-2016, 01:47 AM #19

Doubling your sticks for dual channel would significantly boost performance more than any overclocking effort. Dual channel halves memory bandwidth. Even with full 2400 MT/s, the gain would be only about 28%, which usually means higher CAS latency and voltage increases.

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