Upgrade your Ryzen 2666M to a higher frequency for better performance.
Upgrade your Ryzen 2666M to a higher frequency for better performance.
I worked with Zen (not Zen+) using three different kits (2133mhz CL14, 3200mhz CL16, 3600mhz CL18). The main observation was that the frames appeared higher and tighter across titles when CPU load increased. At 2133mhz, some games became almost unplayable if not completely unplayable with that RAM speed (especially BF5 at full settings). With 3200mhz (using BF5 as an example), I maintained stable 60+ FPS even at maximum configurations (Ryzen 1 in sig). At 3600mhz, I consistently achieved over 80 FPS with the same settings. However, a direct CPU overclock would significantly improve performance in both high and low FPS scenarios. Upgrading my ASUS B350 Prime board is manageable; I can comfortably run an all-core 3.8ghz setup on my R7 1700 with proper 120mm AIO cooling. Keep in mind that your CPU or motherboard might not support 3200mhz—many adjustments are needed to reach stability after reaching around 2933mhz, and the board’s memory controller could also limit speeds beyond a certain point.
I’ll focus on a 3600 new motherboard B450 with 3200MHz RAM to help resolve your issue.
You can avoid damage by maintaining voltage levels within acceptable ranges (SOC 1.1V, memory voltage 1.4V)
As long as the motherboard’s CPU controller supports those frequencies, along with your processor, you should be fine. Most B450 models can handle a 3200 MHz clock speed, though not all. If you opt for the 3200 MHz right away and run into problems, simply adjust the timings to 2933 MHz—results will still work (timing isn’t that critical with high-speed fabrics). On my R7 1700 system, I use both 3200 and 3600 MHz (beyond specs for either CPU or case), and it remains stable 99% of the time after extensive adjustments. When playing competitive games, I downclock to 2666 MHz (maximum memory controller speed is assured) to ensure reliability.
On the 1060 there are fewer stutters and frame problems. Did you apply DDU and eliminate drivers from the 1060 prior to installing the 2060 and re-downloading drivers? If not, that appears to be the problem.
I've had a good time with mine on both Giel and Corsair. The 1600 was really hated by the T-Force.