- May 24, 2017
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Hi,
currently i'm running my DDR3 memory at it's default XMP profile which is 1866MHz, 1.5V, and CL9-11-9-28 timings.
It works great, but i though i could squeeze a bit more performance out of them by doing some manual overclocking, and so i did.
I set the frequency to 2133MHz (which is max for my cpu/motherboard), raised the voltage to 1.65V (i think it's a good value, some memory use that in their XMP profile), and found out that lowest timings that i can boot into windows are CL9-10-10-12. But then i quickly realized that some apps/drivers were not working correctly, data on my ssd was permamently damaged so i had to format the drive and reinstall windows. I also tested the memory in memtest, and there was a lot of memory errors, i did some testing, and the results were that CL9-10-10-14 gave no errors at all in 3 loops of testing. Does that mean that the memory is 100% stable, and i will never get issues with data loss again? fourth timing also seems a bit low compared to it's default xmp settings (14 vs 28)
currently i'm running my DDR3 memory at it's default XMP profile which is 1866MHz, 1.5V, and CL9-11-9-28 timings.
It works great, but i though i could squeeze a bit more performance out of them by doing some manual overclocking, and so i did.
I set the frequency to 2133MHz (which is max for my cpu/motherboard), raised the voltage to 1.65V (i think it's a good value, some memory use that in their XMP profile), and found out that lowest timings that i can boot into windows are CL9-10-10-12. But then i quickly realized that some apps/drivers were not working correctly, data on my ssd was permamently damaged so i had to format the drive and reinstall windows. I also tested the memory in memtest, and there was a lot of memory errors, i did some testing, and the results were that CL9-10-10-14 gave no errors at all in 3 loops of testing. Does that mean that the memory is 100% stable, and i will never get issues with data loss again? fourth timing also seems a bit low compared to it's default xmp settings (14 vs 28)