F5F Stay Refreshed Power Users Overclocking The system indicates a boot failure when XMP is active, yet it successfully starts without XMP enabled.

The system indicates a boot failure when XMP is active, yet it successfully starts without XMP enabled.

The system indicates a boot failure when XMP is active, yet it successfully starts without XMP enabled.

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Splax67
Member
190
05-19-2019, 01:42 AM
#1
I’m working with the following components: ASROCK Z390 Taichi, G.Skill 32GB 3600mhz trident neo z, RTX 2070 Super Gigabyte OC 3 Fanned, NZXT KRAKEN X53, 750W PSU SEASONIC 80+ gold. I have enabled XMP and it reports system failure to boot multiple times with the prompt "press continue," yet when I press continue it doesn’t maintain XMP activation.
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Splax67
05-19-2019, 01:42 AM #1

I’m working with the following components: ASROCK Z390 Taichi, G.Skill 32GB 3600mhz trident neo z, RTX 2070 Super Gigabyte OC 3 Fanned, NZXT KRAKEN X53, 750W PSU SEASONIC 80+ gold. I have enabled XMP and it reports system failure to boot multiple times with the prompt "press continue," yet when I press continue it doesn’t maintain XMP activation.

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Kramble921
Member
230
05-20-2019, 02:23 AM
#2
Hey there,
You can try set the memory manually. You do this in the bios also. Take the timings/voltage details from the 'SPD' and memory tabs in CPU-z. Manually enter those details into the mem tab in your bios. Re-start and see if the speed takes.
Sometimes XMP doesn't work, and manually setting it is the other option. If that doesn't work, I'd RMA the ram.
K
Kramble921
05-20-2019, 02:23 AM #2

Hey there,
You can try set the memory manually. You do this in the bios also. Take the timings/voltage details from the 'SPD' and memory tabs in CPU-z. Manually enter those details into the mem tab in your bios. Re-start and see if the speed takes.
Sometimes XMP doesn't work, and manually setting it is the other option. If that doesn't work, I'd RMA the ram.

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WinterWilson19
Junior Member
9
05-20-2019, 11:44 AM
#3
Hey there,
You can adjust the memory settings directly through the BIOS. Retrieve the timing/voltage information from the 'SPD' and memory tabs in CPU-z, then input those values into the mem tab in your BIOS. Restart and check if performance improves. Sometimes XMP fails, so manual adjustment is a viable alternative. If that doesn't work, consider returning the RAM for replacement.
W
WinterWilson19
05-20-2019, 11:44 AM #3

Hey there,
You can adjust the memory settings directly through the BIOS. Retrieve the timing/voltage information from the 'SPD' and memory tabs in CPU-z, then input those values into the mem tab in your BIOS. Restart and check if performance improves. Sometimes XMP fails, so manual adjustment is a viable alternative. If that doesn't work, consider returning the RAM for replacement.