The system is having trouble detecting the XMP profile.
The system is having trouble detecting the XMP profile.
According to the latest benchmarks, UBM mentioned my XMP profile isn’t active, but I verified it’s enabled in BIOS. I also recently upgraded my CPU from 3.2 to 4.0 using Intel Extreme Tuning Utility. Tests and one-hour stress tests confirmed stability. Restarting into BIOS resets any changes until I applied the new profile. In BIOS settings, I checked that XMP 2.0 was active and set RAM clock speeds to 3200. I only adjusted the CPU’s GHz to 4.0 without changing voltage or other clocks. CPU-Z didn’t show the updated core speed until I opened IETU and loaded the 4.0GHz profile. It’s unclear why changes weren’t saved after saving via BIOS save/load options. If anyone has advice or tips, I’d appreciate it.
The CPU reports 3200, but it should be 1600 multiplied by 2 due to double rate. What’s going on?
Sure, I'm checking if XMP is functioning properly. This is my first time overclocking the CPU, and I just installed RAM faster than 2133 today as well. I've been trying to figure things out myself, so I wanted to confirm everything is working correctly. Thanks for all the help!
It's a reasonable method for discovering optimal configurations. Settings can always be adjusted in the BIOS afterward. NOTE: Some BIOS versions don't provide extensive overclocking features, so XTU might be the best choice.
My friend shared that he used Intel Extreme Tuning Utility, which is a straightforward tool. The software has a simple feature to adjust the GHz slider, and it handles the rest automatically. This makes overclocking even more convenient without needing a system restart.
I believe I understand what’s happening here. Userbenchmark might not always check the current memory speed. It thinks XMP is turned off because performance is slow. The reason the performance is low is that your platform supports quad-channel memory, but only two dimmers are installed (dual channel).
I'm weighing whether to trade in the two sticks for an x4 8G or invest another $170 for a second 32G setup. I'm considering long-term value since the new Skylake chipset promises better gaming performance. Right now, most of my games run on just one or two cores, and the ones I play often use very few. Boosting the CPU clock could really help my FPS. I aim to keep 144 frames per game consistently.