coercitiv
Diamond Member
- Jan 24, 2014
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Oh dear, I completely forgot about this: uncore voltage changes after enabling XMP. Mobo makers have this wonderful habit of pushing uncore voltages proportionately with DDR speed when activating XMP. A few years ago I installed a DDR4 4400 kit on my MSI Z370 board, and was surprised to see SA voltage pushed way higher than it needed to be. The reason is simple, they want to ensure the boards can run extreme DDR speeds at the click of a button.
It would be both comical and very sad if uncore voltage was a second vector that contributes to system instability through degradation. Unfortunately there's no way we can realistically check on this, though it could pottentially explain why people are having such a hard time isolating the cause. As a side-note, SA voltage is locked on non-K CPUs (one of the reasons one does not buy non-K CPUs for gaming these days, since locked SA voltage means XMP memory is harder to make work).
It would be both comical and very sad if uncore voltage was a second vector that contributes to system instability through degradation. Unfortunately there's no way we can realistically check on this, though it could pottentially explain why people are having such a hard time isolating the cause. As a side-note, SA voltage is locked on non-K CPUs (one of the reasons one does not buy non-K CPUs for gaming these days, since locked SA voltage means XMP memory is harder to make work).