[SOLVED] dram calculator help

May 20, 2020
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I have recently looked into using the dram calculator in order to get some more performance out of my ram. However, having followed all of the steps I can see being done, and following the values given in the calculator exactly and even trying all of the alternatives in combinations with each other, I cannot even get it to post, let alone getting it stable, and can really do with some advice on what I should do to proceed.
My hardware:
Ryzen 5 1600 OC'd to 4.2GHz
Asus b450 rog strix gaming-f
corsair vengenance pro 3200MHz CMW16GX4MC3200C16 (running at 2866MHz at that is the max that I can get stable with my cpu, idk whetther this would affect how I go about using the dram calculator)

What I am doing: (check the bottom of the post for photos of thaiphoon and both the safe and fast on dram calculator)

after installing both dram calculator (v1.7.3) and thaiphoon burner

Go on thaiphoon burner and click the "report" button and scroll down the to the bottom and click the "show delays in nanoseconds"
After this I click "export" and click "complete HTML report"

Open dram calculator,
fill in the details of the
processor
memory type
DRAM PCB revision
memory rank
frequency
BCLK
DIMM modules
motherboard

Then I click the "import XMP" and select the exported HTML file.
After this, I have clicked both the "calculate safe" and " calculate fast" buttons and used both of these values that I have been given, and I cannot get anything to post.
I am completely stumped on why this is not working, as it seems from trying to research this problem that most people can atleast get their machine to post, even if it isn't stable.

Am I doing something wrong, or have I missed something?

Thanks in advance for any advice given, it is greatly appreciated, as I am still relatively new to overclocking cpus and ram, especially this in depth.
:)

Calculator safe:
https://ibb.co/qr1CY1Y

calculator fast:
https://ibb.co/vYWY9C5

Thaiphoon burner:
https://ibb.co/xfLDHPX
 
Solution
Well I hope it helps cause the dram calculator doesn't always work on every kit. There is no guarantee with OC RAM and very often depends on the CPUs memory controller.
It's also best to test initially at default frequency. So clear your CMOS and try again,
Well I hope it helps cause the dram calculator doesn't always work on every kit. There is no guarantee with OC RAM and very often depends on the CPUs memory controller.
It's also best to test initially at default frequency. So clear your CMOS and try again,
 
Solution