Hi all
System
CPU Intel 285K SP 101
Board ASRock Z890i Nova ITX
RAM G Skill DDR5 8800 2x24GB F5 8800C4255H24GX2 TZ5CK
GPU XFX RX 9070 XT
Storage 2x Samsung 990 Pro dual boot Windows 11 and Linux Bazzite
PSU Corsair SF1000
Cooling custom CPU loop
BIOS 3.12 latest as of yesterday did a BIOS update.
Currently running: Intel default profile and XMP1 = 6400mhz NGU and D2D = auto this time. Have not tested yet. Since the issues where on BIOS version 2.26 on Asrock mb.
I initially ran XMP 8800 and later reduced frequency to 8400 then 7800 then 7600 with help from G Skill support. All synthetic tests passed including MemTest86, Karhu, OCCT, Prime95 and TM5 full 24 cycles except on 8800mhz which was deceptive stable on Testmem5 (custom profile) error in 2 min. I then moved to 8400mhz now all tests redone and ALL passed incl Testmem5 full 24 cycles.
Real world gaming is not really stable. I get random clean CTDs straight to desktop in Elden Ring, Helldivers 2 and Cyberpunk 2077. This happens on both Windows 11 and Linux Bazzite. Event Viewer usually shows 0x0000005 Access Violation. No WHEA errors no GPU driver resets no BSOD.
The common thread across all frequencies and both OSes is that NGU and D2D were always manually set to 30 for latency reasons without further tweaks. Switching from ASRock Extreme profile to Intel Default did not change behavior.
I have seen mixed reports that some CPUs handle NGU and D2D at 30 without voltage changes while others do not.
Questions
Can NGU and D2D at 30 without fabric or SA related voltage tuning cause 0x0000005 access violation type CTDs under gaming load.
Does this look more like uncore or fabric instability rather than DRAM itself given that all memory tests pass and the issue is OS independent?
Is backing NGU and D2D down to AUTO the correct first step before touching any voltages and if set at auto do i really feel the latency penalty with latest BIOS?
Not interested in CPU core overclocking only stable low latency gaming if it doesnt involve to much fiddling or rather not to.
Many thanks in advance
System
CPU Intel 285K SP 101
Board ASRock Z890i Nova ITX
RAM G Skill DDR5 8800 2x24GB F5 8800C4255H24GX2 TZ5CK
GPU XFX RX 9070 XT
Storage 2x Samsung 990 Pro dual boot Windows 11 and Linux Bazzite
PSU Corsair SF1000
Cooling custom CPU loop
BIOS 3.12 latest as of yesterday did a BIOS update.
Currently running: Intel default profile and XMP1 = 6400mhz NGU and D2D = auto this time. Have not tested yet. Since the issues where on BIOS version 2.26 on Asrock mb.
I initially ran XMP 8800 and later reduced frequency to 8400 then 7800 then 7600 with help from G Skill support. All synthetic tests passed including MemTest86, Karhu, OCCT, Prime95 and TM5 full 24 cycles except on 8800mhz which was deceptive stable on Testmem5 (custom profile) error in 2 min. I then moved to 8400mhz now all tests redone and ALL passed incl Testmem5 full 24 cycles.
Real world gaming is not really stable. I get random clean CTDs straight to desktop in Elden Ring, Helldivers 2 and Cyberpunk 2077. This happens on both Windows 11 and Linux Bazzite. Event Viewer usually shows 0x0000005 Access Violation. No WHEA errors no GPU driver resets no BSOD.
The common thread across all frequencies and both OSes is that NGU and D2D were always manually set to 30 for latency reasons without further tweaks. Switching from ASRock Extreme profile to Intel Default did not change behavior.
I have seen mixed reports that some CPUs handle NGU and D2D at 30 without voltage changes while others do not.
Questions
Can NGU and D2D at 30 without fabric or SA related voltage tuning cause 0x0000005 access violation type CTDs under gaming load.
Does this look more like uncore or fabric instability rather than DRAM itself given that all memory tests pass and the issue is OS independent?
Is backing NGU and D2D down to AUTO the correct first step before touching any voltages and if set at auto do i really feel the latency penalty with latest BIOS?
Not interested in CPU core overclocking only stable low latency gaming if it doesnt involve to much fiddling or rather not to.
Many thanks in advance