F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking The Questionsystem stops working after increasing the RAM speed.

The Questionsystem stops working after increasing the RAM speed.

The Questionsystem stops working after increasing the RAM speed.

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Okunino
Posting Freak
845
05-06-2025, 01:17 PM
#1
hey guys there is something weird going on in my bios. the first time i tried oc the ram from 2400 to 2666 with 1.3V everything thing was fine then i attempt to go 2760 with 1.4Vand the pc did boot but it was little bit unstable. and after that when i went back to bios the voltage was locked to 1.3v it wouldnt go higher it wouldnt go lower. what should i do? should i increase the CL along with frequency?
these are my pc specs
https://www.userbenchmark.com/UserRun/17646119
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Okunino
05-06-2025, 01:17 PM #1

hey guys there is something weird going on in my bios. the first time i tried oc the ram from 2400 to 2666 with 1.3V everything thing was fine then i attempt to go 2760 with 1.4Vand the pc did boot but it was little bit unstable. and after that when i went back to bios the voltage was locked to 1.3v it wouldnt go higher it wouldnt go lower. what should i do? should i increase the CL along with frequency?
these are my pc specs
https://www.userbenchmark.com/UserRun/17646119

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_unknown___
Member
134
05-06-2025, 08:17 PM
#2
reset the bios
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_unknown___
05-06-2025, 08:17 PM #2

reset the bios

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Infinity991
Member
62
05-06-2025, 10:32 PM
#3
What specific RAM do you have? It seems like you're expecting a lot from its OC. If lucky, just one or two steps above it's XMP might work. If it could run smoothly at higher speeds, the manufacturer would label them at that speed and use a better charger. With higher frequency CAS and other latencies, they need to increase to maintain stability. The same applies to voltage, though there are definitely built-in limits.
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Infinity991
05-06-2025, 10:32 PM #3

What specific RAM do you have? It seems like you're expecting a lot from its OC. If lucky, just one or two steps above it's XMP might work. If it could run smoothly at higher speeds, the manufacturer would label them at that speed and use a better charger. With higher frequency CAS and other latencies, they need to increase to maintain stability. The same applies to voltage, though there are definitely built-in limits.

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MachoBeverage
Junior Member
1
05-06-2025, 10:50 PM
#4
Who purchases 2400MHz memory to achieve greater frequencies?
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MachoBeverage
05-06-2025, 10:50 PM #4

Who purchases 2400MHz memory to achieve greater frequencies?

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GreenLightFabi
Senior Member
696
05-07-2025, 06:14 PM
#5
i purchased it around 3 or 4 years ago with various components. at that time, my motherboard only supported up to 2400, so i wondered if it was worth investing in higher frequency. the reason i'm pushing it now is because it's limiting the iGPU performance, resulting in lower fps in cs go.
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GreenLightFabi
05-07-2025, 06:14 PM #5

i purchased it around 3 or 4 years ago with various components. at that time, my motherboard only supported up to 2400, so i wondered if it was worth investing in higher frequency. the reason i'm pushing it now is because it's limiting the iGPU performance, resulting in lower fps in cs go.