Hi there, this question appeared for a couple of times in many forums, but it was usually mostly related to DDR4, if you are DDR5 expert or at least you know something more of it's work than basic overclocker please share your view on how you see changing of timings may affect memory in a long run. I think timers which are set in EXPO/XMP are fine but there is also additional settings in AGESA which is usually called 'Competitive' and 'Aggressive' profiles and you can set completely manually what many prop overclockers do.
Can decreasing of timings or sub-timings (I mean different refresh cycles and similar things they are usually set bu those AGESA profiles) be harmful and lead to faster memory degradation? From what I understand if you use too strict timings that increases amount of cycles your memory modules performs through a single clock, but I am not sure. Some people claim that low timings require more voltage to be applied but if you do not increase voltage that is possibly a mistake.
Can decreasing of timings or sub-timings (I mean different refresh cycles and similar things they are usually set bu those AGESA profiles) be harmful and lead to faster memory degradation? From what I understand if you use too strict timings that increases amount of cycles your memory modules performs through a single clock, but I am not sure. Some people claim that low timings require more voltage to be applied but if you do not increase voltage that is possibly a mistake.