XMP seems to cause system instability.
XMP seems to cause system instability.
My PC shuts down before any display appears. The fans start, then stop, and after restarting it shows a message stating "previous overclock settings failed," followed by the BIOS returning to its default settings. This only occurs occasionally when I first turn on the computer, even though the XMP RAM profile was active recently. Please let me know if any help can be provided.
Make sure the BIOS is up to date. You might need some adjustments to the CPU settings for running at 3000 under XMP. Alternatively, consider increasing the DRAM voltage by 0.05 and/or raising the VCCSA voltage to 1.25.
Just ignore the 3000 numbers. It’ll push the CPU strap to 125 and set the fix core voltage.
Better to try 2666 with a 100 strap. You won’t see any speed change, and your CPU will stay cooler at normal settings. With a 100 strap you can also apply offset and adaptive voltage for better performance tuning.
Just trust me... I’ve been there... 125 strap is terrible...
Thank you for your questions. Could you clarify what XMP does? The issue might lie in running XMP, and if I can manually increase the RAM speed to 3000MHz while keeping the CPU unchanged, it could resolve the problem. Additionally, how probable is it that raising the voltage for RAM and/or CPU will address the issue?
XMP is a profile that gets installed in the DRAM with the appropriate data rate, timing, and voltage settings that the sticks were programmed to operate at for their high (spec) performance. When activated in BIOS, the BIOS reads these parameters and attempts to implement them precisely as intended. This process can be influenced by BIOS updates, as manufacturers frequently release new versions. On the manufacturer’s website, when they announce updates, they often highlight a few main changes, though there may also be numerous minor improvements listed, with DRAM typically showing the largest number of updated or fixed features.
Raising the ram voltage by 0.05 could definitely address your problem. Give it a shot.
Remaining guidance: avoid using the 125 strap. You likely enabled xmp on 3000mhz ram without realizing it.
My suggestion: keep xmp active, pick CPU strap 100 manually, adjust multiplier to 36, configure memory at 2666Mhz. Initially leave all voltage settings auto, then gradually increase multipliers and apply offset/adaptive voltage...
I'm sorry for not responding earlier, but I've been quite busy lately and needed a stable computer. This means the XMP profile was incorrect, and I wasn't adjusting any BIOS/RAM/CPU settings (the GPU was always working).
Today I tried turning on the profile just to test, and everything is now fine. I even managed a few restarts without issues.
I hope this post provides useful guidance, but it seems the problem resolved itself unexpectedly. Could you help me understand what might have caused this?
Thank you for your support.
You're still using xmp at 3000mhz with auto settings, 125 strap, and high core voltage. Everything seems fine. Did you observe any slowdown when disabling xmp and running ram at 2133Mhz? You didn't notice it. Also, your CPU runs cooler than expected—why is that?