When I boot the system on 6200mhz XMP, it keeps crashing so I had to change it to 6000mhz, does anyone know how to fix this problem because I want to run them at full speed but they keep crashing.
CORSAIR VENGEANCE RGB 32GB (2X16GB) 6200MHZ DDR5 CRASHES AFTER ENABLING XMP ON 6200MHZ
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Hello
Give us your complete pc spec’s.
Also download and post . Speccy - Free Download
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Originally posted by veegHello
Give us your complete pc spec’s.
Also download and post . Speccy - Free Download
To post.
To publish a Speccy profile to the Web:
In Speccy, click File, and then click Publish Snapshot.
In the Publish Snapshot dialog box, click Yes to enable Speccy to proceed.
Speccy publishes the profile and displays a second Publish Snapshot. You can open the URL in your default browser, copy it to the clipboard, or close the dialog box.Comment
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Originally posted by veegGood give us your complete psu spec’s..
@Bruce
8 OVP (Over Voltage) | UVP (Under Voltage) | SCP (Short Circuit) | OTP (Over Temp) | OPP (Over Power) ATX12V v2.4 and EPS 2.92 standards 1 v2.4 Low-Profile, All Black 1000 Watts 2 Fluid Dynamic Bearing 135mm 100,000 hours YES 16 ATX No 150mm x 86mm x 180mm Fully Yes 1 8 Yes No Platinum 10 Year 4.21 Comment
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Nice high-end PSU - no issues there, and a great fit for the RX6900 card. (y)
Speccy isn’t showing your memory make/model, what is that?
But to work at 6000MHz and not 6200MHz, I’m guessing you are either hitting a limit somewhere or something isn’t compatible.
Have you checked the QVL here; [Motherboard] How to query (CPU/memory) QVL List? | Official Support | ASUS Global to see if the memory is compatible with the mobo?
But in all honesty, that 200MHz difference (which really becomes just 100 since they count the up and down ticks instead of a full cycle) would not be noticeable.
DDR memory speeds
“Like the ticking of a clock, each tick represents a single hertz or cycle (the opening and closing of a transistor gate in this case).
A speed of 1Hz, for example, is one cycle per second; 2Hz is two per second; a MHz is 1,000,000 cycles per second; you get the picture.
The problem is when DDR (or double data rate) RAM came on the scene, it changed how data transfers were registered. Instead of only actuating once on the rise of each clock cycle, it could now also process an additional operation on the fall of that same clock cycle, effectively doubling the rate at which the DIMM could process data.
The figure for accurate measurement of data transfer requests then shifted from MHz to MT/s to adjust for this change, despite the fact that memory still operated at the same frequency.
However, marketing apparently didn’t get that memo, because many companies, in a bid to tout it as the next big thing, ignored the MT/s figure, instead referring it as MHz, while modern day memory quoted at 2,400MHz, for instance, only operates at half that frequency.”
APC Mag, Apr 2018, Issue 453Comment
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Being that the OP revisited the forum but chose not to reply this thread will be marked and closed.Comment
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