- Feb 2, 2008
- 2,219
- 219
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(Please don't invoke the debate about the gains to be found from faster DDR4. I want to focus specifically on getting stability in a speed range of 3200–3600 and need specific, clear, data-driven info. Thanks!)
I am setting up a computer system for a friend and bought a 16 GB (2 X 8) EVGA 3200 1.35 pack (Samsung chips, dual rank I believe) and installed it into an AsRock Z170 Gaming ITX/AC board. It has the latest BIOS.
stock: 16-18-18-38-2T-540, 3200, 1.35
mine: 15-16-16-36-1T-460, 3466, 1.385 (power supply overvolts 3.3V line to ~3.360), 1:26
6700K:
stock: 1.23V
mine: 1.15V, level 2 LLC (voltage seems rock solid under Prime so far, definitely the least variation at 1.15 in BIOS under load — basically none)
I thought I had stability because I did Prime (including 90% RAM) for two hours and an hour of MemTest (8 copies in Windows). However, I ran MemTest again and now every time I run it I get about 200% coverage of the 2048 MB parts and then one of the tests with the smallest memory increment gets an error. The first failure was with a 768 MB partition. The next was in a 256 MB partition. The third was in a 768 MB partition. The 2048 MB and 1024 MB partitions never error.
My hypothesis is that the RAM is heating up in those smaller partitions more. Part of the trouble is that the ITX case I have requires that my H90 cooler blow its heat right toward the RAM. So it does run rather hot.
It's possible that turning off fast boot and allowing the RAM to train at boot may be causing, possibly just in part, the instability. But I can't say for certain because I didn't run MemTest long enough with small enough RAM increments.
As usual, there are wildly conflicting reports about voltage and DDR4. Some sites use really high voltages, making their results useless for me to try to work with because they have lopsided settings like 14-17-17 at very high speeds that probably require lots of voltage. (Sadly, these tend to be the only sites that work with the timings I'm particularly curious about, like tWR, tRFC, etc.) Some posters argue that anything about 1.35 is super-dangerous and shouldn't be used. So I backed my RAM in BIOS to 1.33 to get it to 1.35 according to AIDA64 and HWINFO64.
I just bumped the tRFC to 480 to try to get stability but I would like to know more precisely how to determine what a safe tRAS and tRFC number is for 15-16-16-1T at 3466.
I've seen silly claims in various "guide" forum topics that it has to be 41 +-2 (tRTP + tCL + TRCD)which would make a minimum of 39 but that doesn't match actual shipping RAM sets including mine. Its specs are 16-18-18-38 — higher latency settings but lower tRAS! I find it hard to believe that memory manufacturers are shipping most, if not all, of their DDR4 RAM sets at a tRAS below the minimum required.
Input on the timing settings to tweak to get better stability without throwing performance out the window are very appreciated.
Some questions:
• Is bumping tRFC to 480 from 460 enough of a change or do I need to do more to try to get stability?
• Will reducing voltage to 1.35 possibly make me stable, if RAM overheating is the cause of the problem?
• Should I turn quick boot on, disabling training? People say to manually lock in settings but there are a ton of them so that's not exactly a simple proposition. Will leaving training on lead to instability because of different settings each time the system boots? How can I lock the settings if I don't know what they should be — just leave most of the arcane ones on AUTO?
• Should I increase tREFI? One article I read said bit flips can happen with the very board I have above 19,000 so I think keeping it below that is a good idea. It's at 11,000 something currently which is the default. People have said tREFI increases can increase performance but never explain by how much or what the drawback might be.
• Are the really lopsided settings (e.g. 14-17-17) I see in the high voltage articles worthwhile even at 1.35? Are non-lopsided settings better (e.g. 16-16-16)?
• One article used 2T for its high-speed RAM testing. Is it worthwhile to sacrifice the latency under 2T to get better settings in other areas, leading to an overall gain? Everyone else goes to 1T but I see that 2T is popular with RAM makers.
• What is the real proven basis for calculating tRAS? Please give this method in simple numbers not arcane nanoseconds that I can't input into BIOS.
• What is the real proven basis for calculating tRFC? (Simple numbers.)
• Is there any data about Skylake being able to handle anything above 1.35 and below 1.4V?
• Is there a good second test for RAM stability after running 8 instances of MemTest? The whole "just use your PC and see" method won't work because I don't want to give him an unstable system. Also, some have said even using stock settings with high-speed RAM sometimes leads to instability so the answer "Just set it at stock" doesn't necessarily work. I am probably already going to have to wipe and reinstall Windows or roll back to an earlier point because when I booted today some icons were missing from desktop shortcuts which suggests corruption.
• Are my tests flawed because of the heat issue — do I need to blast the video card to heat up the case?
Thanks!
I am setting up a computer system for a friend and bought a 16 GB (2 X 8) EVGA 3200 1.35 pack (Samsung chips, dual rank I believe) and installed it into an AsRock Z170 Gaming ITX/AC board. It has the latest BIOS.
stock: 16-18-18-38-2T-540, 3200, 1.35
mine: 15-16-16-36-1T-460, 3466, 1.385 (power supply overvolts 3.3V line to ~3.360), 1:26
6700K:
stock: 1.23V
mine: 1.15V, level 2 LLC (voltage seems rock solid under Prime so far, definitely the least variation at 1.15 in BIOS under load — basically none)
I thought I had stability because I did Prime (including 90% RAM) for two hours and an hour of MemTest (8 copies in Windows). However, I ran MemTest again and now every time I run it I get about 200% coverage of the 2048 MB parts and then one of the tests with the smallest memory increment gets an error. The first failure was with a 768 MB partition. The next was in a 256 MB partition. The third was in a 768 MB partition. The 2048 MB and 1024 MB partitions never error.
My hypothesis is that the RAM is heating up in those smaller partitions more. Part of the trouble is that the ITX case I have requires that my H90 cooler blow its heat right toward the RAM. So it does run rather hot.
It's possible that turning off fast boot and allowing the RAM to train at boot may be causing, possibly just in part, the instability. But I can't say for certain because I didn't run MemTest long enough with small enough RAM increments.
As usual, there are wildly conflicting reports about voltage and DDR4. Some sites use really high voltages, making their results useless for me to try to work with because they have lopsided settings like 14-17-17 at very high speeds that probably require lots of voltage. (Sadly, these tend to be the only sites that work with the timings I'm particularly curious about, like tWR, tRFC, etc.) Some posters argue that anything about 1.35 is super-dangerous and shouldn't be used. So I backed my RAM in BIOS to 1.33 to get it to 1.35 according to AIDA64 and HWINFO64.
I just bumped the tRFC to 480 to try to get stability but I would like to know more precisely how to determine what a safe tRAS and tRFC number is for 15-16-16-1T at 3466.
I've seen silly claims in various "guide" forum topics that it has to be 41 +-2 (tRTP + tCL + TRCD)which would make a minimum of 39 but that doesn't match actual shipping RAM sets including mine. Its specs are 16-18-18-38 — higher latency settings but lower tRAS! I find it hard to believe that memory manufacturers are shipping most, if not all, of their DDR4 RAM sets at a tRAS below the minimum required.
Input on the timing settings to tweak to get better stability without throwing performance out the window are very appreciated.
Some questions:
• Is bumping tRFC to 480 from 460 enough of a change or do I need to do more to try to get stability?
• Will reducing voltage to 1.35 possibly make me stable, if RAM overheating is the cause of the problem?
• Should I turn quick boot on, disabling training? People say to manually lock in settings but there are a ton of them so that's not exactly a simple proposition. Will leaving training on lead to instability because of different settings each time the system boots? How can I lock the settings if I don't know what they should be — just leave most of the arcane ones on AUTO?
• Should I increase tREFI? One article I read said bit flips can happen with the very board I have above 19,000 so I think keeping it below that is a good idea. It's at 11,000 something currently which is the default. People have said tREFI increases can increase performance but never explain by how much or what the drawback might be.
• Are the really lopsided settings (e.g. 14-17-17) I see in the high voltage articles worthwhile even at 1.35? Are non-lopsided settings better (e.g. 16-16-16)?
• One article used 2T for its high-speed RAM testing. Is it worthwhile to sacrifice the latency under 2T to get better settings in other areas, leading to an overall gain? Everyone else goes to 1T but I see that 2T is popular with RAM makers.
• What is the real proven basis for calculating tRAS? Please give this method in simple numbers not arcane nanoseconds that I can't input into BIOS.
• What is the real proven basis for calculating tRFC? (Simple numbers.)
• Is there any data about Skylake being able to handle anything above 1.35 and below 1.4V?
• Is there a good second test for RAM stability after running 8 instances of MemTest? The whole "just use your PC and see" method won't work because I don't want to give him an unstable system. Also, some have said even using stock settings with high-speed RAM sometimes leads to instability so the answer "Just set it at stock" doesn't necessarily work. I am probably already going to have to wipe and reinstall Windows or roll back to an earlier point because when I booted today some icons were missing from desktop shortcuts which suggests corruption.
• Are my tests flawed because of the heat issue — do I need to blast the video card to heat up the case?
Thanks!