F5F Stay Refreshed Hardware Desktop Your RAM's CAS latency is configured at 1 nanoseconds.

Your RAM's CAS latency is configured at 1 nanoseconds.

Your RAM's CAS latency is configured at 1 nanoseconds.

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sjaastad
Junior Member
46
09-18-2016, 11:28 PM
#21
1.350 volts isn't suitable at 3600Mhz. I'll attempt 3200Mhz with 1.350 volts.
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sjaastad
09-18-2016, 11:28 PM #21

1.350 volts isn't suitable at 3600Mhz. I'll attempt 3200Mhz with 1.350 volts.

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ChazmanC98
Member
207
09-20-2016, 11:58 AM
#22
Your CPU-Z shows you're already at 3200 (1600MHz effective)? The other screens display the Jedec (stock) profile. Consider these settings for better stability. Manually adjust - SOC 1.1250v, DRAM voltage 1.360V (slightly higher to avoid droop), CAS latency to 18 (CL) when using XMP/DOCP and underclocked. Disable Power Down mode if running manually with OC (XMP/DOCP off) and odd CAS latency. If this is your rig, aim for around 2933MHz and set Punch-in values as 16-18-18-18-38 at 2TCR (command rate). Use Trfc at 400 and Trc at 70, then gradually raise frequency to boost bandwidth while benefiting from lower latency. You should notice improvement either way. Even if you don't hit 3200MHz... Try DL AIDA64. Launch it, click tools at the top, run cache and memory benchmarks. Start with stock 2133MHz for a baseline, then proceed to overclock. Great job!
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ChazmanC98
09-20-2016, 11:58 AM #22

Your CPU-Z shows you're already at 3200 (1600MHz effective)? The other screens display the Jedec (stock) profile. Consider these settings for better stability. Manually adjust - SOC 1.1250v, DRAM voltage 1.360V (slightly higher to avoid droop), CAS latency to 18 (CL) when using XMP/DOCP and underclocked. Disable Power Down mode if running manually with OC (XMP/DOCP off) and odd CAS latency. If this is your rig, aim for around 2933MHz and set Punch-in values as 16-18-18-18-38 at 2TCR (command rate). Use Trfc at 400 and Trc at 70, then gradually raise frequency to boost bandwidth while benefiting from lower latency. You should notice improvement either way. Even if you don't hit 3200MHz... Try DL AIDA64. Launch it, click tools at the top, run cache and memory benchmarks. Start with stock 2133MHz for a baseline, then proceed to overclock. Great job!

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54
09-24-2016, 08:30 PM
#23
Execute 3600mhz at 1.36v or 1.37v with RAM.
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xXcarlos117Xx2
09-24-2016, 08:30 PM #23

Execute 3600mhz at 1.36v or 1.37v with RAM.

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ItsVine
Junior Member
17
09-25-2016, 04:03 AM
#24
I changed the RAM to 3200Mhz at CL16. In the BIOS I activated the Extreme Memory Profile (X.M.P.) Profile 1. Then I adjusted the XMP High Frequency Support to level 1 since my RAM reaches 3200 Mhz. I configured the System Memory Multiplier to 32.00. Finally, I set the DRAM Voltage (CH A/B0) to 1.350V. Everything functions correctly!
I
ItsVine
09-25-2016, 04:03 AM #24

I changed the RAM to 3200Mhz at CL16. In the BIOS I activated the Extreme Memory Profile (X.M.P.) Profile 1. Then I adjusted the XMP High Frequency Support to level 1 since my RAM reaches 3200 Mhz. I configured the System Memory Multiplier to 32.00. Finally, I set the DRAM Voltage (CH A/B0) to 1.350V. Everything functions correctly!

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