F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop The PC fails to exit the BIOS even though XMP is activated.

The PC fails to exit the BIOS even though XMP is activated.

The PC fails to exit the BIOS even though XMP is activated.

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ReborntoKill
Posting Freak
821
09-29-2023, 10:27 AM
#1
Hello, I recently assembled a brand new gaming PC from the ground up. The CPU is a Ryzen 7 7800X3D, paired with an NVIDIA GeForce GTX 3080 GPU. The RAM is Corsair Vengeance DDR5 32GB at 7200 MHz. The motherboard is a Gigabyte B650 AORUS ELITE AX ATX. When I first powered on, I activated XMP in the BIOS to boost my RAM performance. However, the PC would only boot into BIOS and not into Windows. I attempted to manually adjust the RAM settings, including clock speeds and voltage. Lowering the clock speed to around 6000 MHz resolved the issue. After some days, I still encountered BSOD errors. I realized that reverting the RAM to its default settings stopped the crashes. I’ve been running at 4800 MHz since then, even though I opted for the higher clock speed. If anyone has additional tips or solutions, I’d really appreciate it.
R
ReborntoKill
09-29-2023, 10:27 AM #1

Hello, I recently assembled a brand new gaming PC from the ground up. The CPU is a Ryzen 7 7800X3D, paired with an NVIDIA GeForce GTX 3080 GPU. The RAM is Corsair Vengeance DDR5 32GB at 7200 MHz. The motherboard is a Gigabyte B650 AORUS ELITE AX ATX. When I first powered on, I activated XMP in the BIOS to boost my RAM performance. However, the PC would only boot into BIOS and not into Windows. I attempted to manually adjust the RAM settings, including clock speeds and voltage. Lowering the clock speed to around 6000 MHz resolved the issue. After some days, I still encountered BSOD errors. I realized that reverting the RAM to its default settings stopped the crashes. I’ve been running at 4800 MHz since then, even though I opted for the higher clock speed. If anyone has additional tips or solutions, I’d really appreciate it.

F
fefe67140
Junior Member
22
10-07-2023, 03:48 AM
#2
Probably most Ryzen processors don't exceed 6000 MHz.
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fefe67140
10-07-2023, 03:48 AM #2

Probably most Ryzen processors don't exceed 6000 MHz.

J
JenJen14
Junior Member
1
10-22-2023, 06:33 AM
#3
Then maintain the 6000MT/s setting, it improves overall performance. For context, AM5 CPUs support two memory configurations: 1:1 and 2:1. The 1:1 setting provides significantly lower latency, whereas 2:1 enables higher clock rates. Beyond 6000MT/s the system switches to 2:1, but due to the substantial latency cost, noticeable gains only appear around 7600MT/s. At that point, 7200 CL34 will lag behind 6000 CL30. Additionally, with a single CCD chip and reduced FCLK bandwidth, the benefits of faster clocks aren<|pad|>, so 2:1 mode offers little advantage. If you continue to fail at 6000MT/s, consider updating the BIOS, as certain revisions can cause memory inconsistencies.
J
JenJen14
10-22-2023, 06:33 AM #3

Then maintain the 6000MT/s setting, it improves overall performance. For context, AM5 CPUs support two memory configurations: 1:1 and 2:1. The 1:1 setting provides significantly lower latency, whereas 2:1 enables higher clock rates. Beyond 6000MT/s the system switches to 2:1, but due to the substantial latency cost, noticeable gains only appear around 7600MT/s. At that point, 7200 CL34 will lag behind 6000 CL30. Additionally, with a single CCD chip and reduced FCLK bandwidth, the benefits of faster clocks aren<|pad|>, so 2:1 mode offers little advantage. If you continue to fail at 6000MT/s, consider updating the BIOS, as certain revisions can cause memory inconsistencies.