Using overclockingxmp causes my system to perform poorly, but I don’t want to lock into a 2133MHz setting.
Using overclockingxmp causes my system to perform poorly, but I don’t want to lock into a 2133MHz setting.
The issue is that I’m unfamiliar with RAM overclocking and unsure how to proceed. Do I need to learn how to overclock RAM, or is there a simpler method? I have Corsair Vengeance LX 16GB 2x8GB DDR4 3200MHz RAM installed.
The remaining specifications detail hardware capabilities, software requirements, and performance benchmarks. Regarding your question, "XMP makes my system run really bad" means applying extended memory profiles can cause instability or crashes because it forces the system to use more RAM than it can handle, leading to slowdowns or failure.
If "really bad" refers to instability, the simplest approach is to lower the frequency with XMP activated. It’s straightforward—access the BIOS, enable XMP, and adjust the clock speed to a lower setting (such as DDR4-2933). This should improve stability compared to higher speeds like DDR4-3200, though it won’t match the performance of DDR4-2133.
It performed quite consistently. In extreme conditions, I achieved around 30-40 frames per second during Nightmare graphics, while it jumped to about 200 FPS in Ultra Nightmare.
the only modification i made was the xmp section
i thought that was all done
Gigabyte produced many Z490M boards, and I was expecting a specific model. My initial idea was an XMP timing problem, because some kits have poorly written XMP settings that actually slow performance rather than help it. Cutting FPS by over 80% is unlikely here; usually it's only around 10% when the XMP configuration is bad. Enabling XMP likely affects other settings, which can impact CPU and GPU speed. Still, verify the timing you're using—tools like HWInfo work well, but I often prefer ASRock Timing Configurator or ASUS MemTweakIt. It's more crucial to compare CPU/GPU clock speeds and usage during gaming before and after enabling XMP.