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New Ram is Crushing computer. XMP/DOCP

Hello,

 

Just bought and installed new ram, went into the bios and set it to 3600 like it says on the box and when i tried to run cinebench it crashed. Did a ram cal but it was confusing and didnt know where to put all of the numbers. I tried to turn on XMP but couldnt find it but i found DOCP so i turned that on, cinebench crashed again. How do i optimize this new ram?

 

Ryzen 3900x

asus strix rog 570 i 

G.SKILL Trident Z Neo (For AMD Ryzen) Series 16GB (2 x 8GB) 288-Pin RGB DDR4 SDRAM DDR4 3600 (PC4 28800) Desktop Memory Model F4-3600C16D-16GTZNC

https://www.newegg.com/g-skill-16gb-288-pin-ddr4-sdram/p/N82E16820232859?Item=N82E16820232859

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ok. So DOCP = XMP. If turning it on yields an unstable system you can pursue 1 of 2 solutions without manually messing with timings:

1- Set DOCP/XMP, and then drop the frequency a tiny bit

2- Set DOCP/XMP and then Increase your SOC voltage a smidgen and your vram voltage a smidgen until you reach stability.

 

Instability with ram has to do with your integrated memory controller, motherboard tracings, and actual ram sticks. Usually things will stabilize at lower clocks, but if you insist on pushing a higher frequency, bumping up voltage a tiny bit usually does the trick

AMD Ryzen 3950x under a Noctua D15S, 32 Gb G Skill FlareX 3200 DDR4 running at 3200 CL14, Gigabyte Aorus Pro 570 Wifi, Gigabyte 2070 Super hooked to a Dell U2718Q 4k HDR monitor & an Acer 1440p 144hz IPS panel of some kind, an Inland 1 TB M.2 PCIE 4 main drive, a Samsung NVME M.2 250Gb, WD Blue 500Gb  and 1 TB SSDs, Corsair RMX750, Rainbows and butterflies...

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you CPU may not be stable at 3600MHz, it's not too common but it's a possibility

AMD only officially validate the cpu to work with up to 3200MHz ram

-sigh- feeling like I'm being too negative lately

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1 minute ago, RyzenDoctor said:

ok. So DOCP = XMP. If turning it on yields an unstable system you can pursue 1 of 2 solutions without manually messing with timings:

1- Set DOCP/XMP, and then drop the frequency a tiny bit

2- Set DOCP/XMP and then Increase your SOC voltage a smidgen and your vram voltage a smidgen until you reach stability.

 

Instability with ram has to do with your integrated memory controller, motherboard tracings, and actual ram sticks. Usually things will stabilize at lower clocks, but if you insist on pushing a higher frequency, bumping up voltage a tiny bit usually does the trick

Let me try to do that real quick.

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Just now, Moonzy said:

you CPU may not be stable at 3600MHz, it's not too common but it's a possibility

AMD only officially validate the cpu to work with up to 3200MHz ram

what you saying is i bought 3600 mhz for no reason and its a waste of money LOL

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3 minutes ago, TrickEgo said:

what you saying is i bought 3600 mhz for no reason and its a waste of money LOL

could be a possibility yea

but you may be able to make it work with more voltage etc, not too familiar with RAM OC

 

im jelly coz it's CL16, lowest i could get was CL18

-sigh- feeling like I'm being too negative lately

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10 minutes ago, TrickEgo said:

what you saying is i bought 3600 mhz for no reason and its a waste of money LOL

No it's not, just that it's considered an overclock and it.may not work.all the time

CPU: i7-2600K 4751MHz 1.44V (software) --> 1.47V at the back of the socket Motherboard: Asrock Z77 Extreme4 (BCLK: 103.3MHz) CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-D15 RAM: Adata XPG 2x8GB DDR3 (XMP: 2133MHz 10-11-11-30 CR2, custom: 2203MHz 10-11-10-26 CR1 tRFC:230 tREFI:14000) GPU: Asus GTX 1070 Dual (Super Jetstream vbios, +70(2025-2088MHz)/+400(8.8Gbps)) SSD: Samsung 840 Pro 256GB (main boot drive), Transcend SSD370 128GB PSU: Seasonic X-660 80+ Gold Case: Antec P110 Silent, 5 intakes 1 exhaust Monitor: AOC G2460PF 1080p 144Hz (150Hz max w/ DP, 121Hz max w/ HDMI) TN panel Keyboard: Logitech G610 Orion (Cherry MX Blue) with SteelSeries Apex M260 keycaps Mouse: BenQ Zowie FK1

 

Model: HP Omen 17 17-an110ca CPU: i7-8750H (0.125V core & cache, 50mV SA undervolt) GPU: GTX 1060 6GB Mobile (+80/+450, 1650MHz~1750MHz 0.78V~0.85V) RAM: 8+8GB DDR4-2400 18-17-17-39 2T Storage: HP EX920 1TB PCIe x4 M.2 SSD + Crucial MX500 1TB 2.5" SATA SSD, 128GB Toshiba PCIe x2 M.2 SSD (KBG30ZMV128G) gone cooking externally, 1TB Seagate 7200RPM 2.5" HDD (ST1000LM049-2GH172) left outside Monitor: 1080p 126Hz IPS G-sync

 

Desktop benching:

Cinebench R15 Single thread:168 Multi-thread: 833 

SuperPi (v1.5 from Techpowerup, PI value output) 16K: 0.100s 1M: 8.255s 32M: 7m 45.93s

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16 minutes ago, RyzenDoctor said:

ok. So DOCP = XMP. If turning it on yields an unstable system you can pursue 1 of 2 solutions without manually messing with timings:

1- Set DOCP/XMP, and then drop the frequency a tiny bit

2- Set DOCP/XMP and then Increase your SOC voltage a smidgen and your vram voltage a smidgen until you reach stability.

 

Instability with ram has to do with your integrated memory controller, motherboard tracings, and actual ram sticks. Usually things will stabilize at lower clocks, but if you insist on pushing a higher frequency, bumping up voltage a tiny bit usually does the trick

Hello, again 

 

I lower the frequency a bit to around 3500mhz and it was stable i got alot better cinebench scores but temps at full load are at 75 degrees from 72. 

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35 minutes ago, TrickEgo said:

Hello, again 

 

I lower the frequency a bit to around 3500mhz and it was stable i got alot better cinebench scores but temps at full load are at 75 degrees from 72. 

75c isnt too bad. What kind of cooler are you using?

 

AMD Ryzen 3950x under a Noctua D15S, 32 Gb G Skill FlareX 3200 DDR4 running at 3200 CL14, Gigabyte Aorus Pro 570 Wifi, Gigabyte 2070 Super hooked to a Dell U2718Q 4k HDR monitor & an Acer 1440p 144hz IPS panel of some kind, an Inland 1 TB M.2 PCIE 4 main drive, a Samsung NVME M.2 250Gb, WD Blue 500Gb  and 1 TB SSDs, Corsair RMX750, Rainbows and butterflies...

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36 minutes ago, RyzenDoctor said:

75c isnt too bad. What kind of cooler are you using?

 

Ek rbg aio 240

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