I would like to be able to pop in a third stick of ram into my system since my roommate has an extra 512 mb dimm (we are wierd like that). I may not do this immediately, since I would have to give up my timings, but it would be great to know how to do this for whenever it is needed.
I have read on Anandtech (I think) that they were able to run three sticks of PC-3200 with this mobo at full speed by simply setting the memclock in the BIOS to DDR400. If I do this, the ram still boots up at PC-2700 speeds, which is the default setting with three. Maybe this is a bios problem. I am running the most up-to-date version as listed on MSI's website.
Another way I thought of doing it was to let it boot up at PC-2700 speeds and then overclock the FSB until the memory was running at, or close to 200. I figured out that if I put the FSB at 245, and change the CPU multiplier to 9, then everything should be well within stable operating frequencies:
CPU - 245 x 9 = 2205 (2.2 GHz is default)
HT - 245 x 4 = 980 (It is rated for 1 GHz)
RAM - CPU/11 = 200
The only problem is that if I set the FSB to 245 in BIOS, then the system will not post. If I let it boot to windows at 200, and then use CoreCenter to overclock it, then the system freezes around 230.
This is in accordance to my previous overclocking attempts with this mobo, where I get errors in Prime95 if I brought the FSB to 220, even with a lowered CPU multiplier. With my previous mobo, a VIA K8T800, I was able to hit close to 2.4 GHz with the same CPU, and my RAM ought to be just as capable.
This leads me to believe that it is a AGP/PCI lock error. Is there anyway to ensure that the locks are working, or is there something else that I should try? I am running two SATA drives in addition to what is listed below.
Thanks for your help.
I have read on Anandtech (I think) that they were able to run three sticks of PC-3200 with this mobo at full speed by simply setting the memclock in the BIOS to DDR400. If I do this, the ram still boots up at PC-2700 speeds, which is the default setting with three. Maybe this is a bios problem. I am running the most up-to-date version as listed on MSI's website.
Another way I thought of doing it was to let it boot up at PC-2700 speeds and then overclock the FSB until the memory was running at, or close to 200. I figured out that if I put the FSB at 245, and change the CPU multiplier to 9, then everything should be well within stable operating frequencies:
CPU - 245 x 9 = 2205 (2.2 GHz is default)
HT - 245 x 4 = 980 (It is rated for 1 GHz)
RAM - CPU/11 = 200
The only problem is that if I set the FSB to 245 in BIOS, then the system will not post. If I let it boot to windows at 200, and then use CoreCenter to overclock it, then the system freezes around 230.
This is in accordance to my previous overclocking attempts with this mobo, where I get errors in Prime95 if I brought the FSB to 220, even with a lowered CPU multiplier. With my previous mobo, a VIA K8T800, I was able to hit close to 2.4 GHz with the same CPU, and my RAM ought to be just as capable.
This leads me to believe that it is a AGP/PCI lock error. Is there anyway to ensure that the locks are working, or is there something else that I should try? I am running two SATA drives in addition to what is listed below.
Thanks for your help.