QuickestSIlver Posted Saturday at 01:32 AM Posted Saturday at 01:32 AM . all in the title and image. if i set to 6000 in BIOS it BSoDs.
QuickestSIlver Posted Saturday at 01:32 AM Author Posted Saturday at 01:32 AM literally made an account just to post this btw.
c-attack Posted Saturday at 12:53 PM Posted Saturday at 12:53 PM This is going to be about your motherboard and BIOS. You'll need to post some detail about those things. Motherboard model, CPU model, exact RAM model/specifications or we have to guess.
QuickestSIlver Posted yesterday at 03:01 AM Author Posted yesterday at 03:01 AM yo mb for late response. msi b650 tomahawk wifi, r7 9700x, cl36 corsair vengeance 6000 mt/s rgb
Administrators Technobeard Posted yesterday at 08:51 AM Administrators Posted yesterday at 08:51 AM 19 hours ago, c-attack said: exact RAM model/specifications or we have to guess. 5 hours ago, QuickestSIlver said: cl36 corsair vengeance 6000 mt/s rgb What is the exact part number on the modules? How many modules do you have? Did they all come in one kit (package) ?
c-attack Posted 20 hours ago Posted 20 hours ago I am going to assume you have the 2x16 Vengeance RGB kit with primary timings of 36-38-38-76 @1.25v. For the moment I think you need to proceed like this is a motherboard/CPU limitation and test. Go into your BIOS and turn off XMP. Then enter the manual DRAM timing section of your BIOS. I don't have an MSI board, so I can't walk you through step by step. It's probably in the Advanced BIOS rather than the summary BIOS most show by default. F7 is usually the switch between the two. Change the DRAM frequency to 5600. In the DRAM timing section, enter the primary XMP timings for your kit. I believe MSI uses the standard abbreviations rather than the longer phrase terms. tCL = 36 tRCD = 38 tRP = 38 tRAS = 76 Leave Command Rate and tRFC (if present) on Auto as well as all other timings. The BIOS will follow it's pre-programmed rules and set conservative values to help you post. Go back to the main page and you'll need to find the DRAM voltage. There are several, but on most boards the main module voltage will be called VDD or simply "DRAM voltage". Set it to 1.25v. It is NOT VDDQ or VPP. Those are accessory voltages and can stay on auto. Save your settings and exit the BIOS. See if it will reboot at pass stability tests at 5600.
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