Hi all,
I recently built a new system with Ryzen 5 5600X, MSI MAG B550 Tomahawk, 2 x 16 GB Corsair Vengeance LPX 3600 MHz CL18 & MSI Radeon RX 6800 Gaming X Trio.
Putting it all together was somewhat of an ordeal and when it finally booted I casually enabled XMP in the UEFI settings. After that the machine didn't post, the DRAM error led was lit and I had to remove the ridiculously huge GPU along with its anti-sag bracket to access the CMOS reset jumper.
Now, I've been looking into this and it seems that either the default BIOS version had some bugs in the XMP settings or I had bad luck in the silicon lottery and the memory controller on my 5600X can't handle 3600 MHz. I have received suggestions to turn on XMP and then manually lower the memory clock to 3200 MHz and FCLK to 1600 MHz while retaining the XMP timing settings. It seems like a safe bet but I've been hesitant to try anything yet.
I'm NOT looking to squeeze out every last bit of performance and I know next to nothing about RAM overclocking aside from what I've read during the last couple of days. I'd rather have stable RAM with a moderate performance increase than spend days tweaking timings.
Currently the RAM clock is at 2666 MHz (plug'n'play). According to various software tools the memory ICs are Micron Rev. B series.
And yes, the sticks are installed correctly into slots A2 and B2 as instructed in the mobo manual.
I'm also fully aware that there is no foolrpoof way to get everything working on the first try but I'm trying to gather information to avoid any unnecessary hassle since my free time is limited.
In the motherboard manual there is a mention of a feature called "Memory Try It!" It's some sort of automatic memory overclock checker that should be able to revert to previous working settings in case the RAM config fails. Can anyone tell me if it's worth trying and does it actually work? Not having to clear the CMOS after every failure would save me a lot of time. I've upgraded the BIOS to the newest version 7C91vA8
I recently built a new system with Ryzen 5 5600X, MSI MAG B550 Tomahawk, 2 x 16 GB Corsair Vengeance LPX 3600 MHz CL18 & MSI Radeon RX 6800 Gaming X Trio.
Putting it all together was somewhat of an ordeal and when it finally booted I casually enabled XMP in the UEFI settings. After that the machine didn't post, the DRAM error led was lit and I had to remove the ridiculously huge GPU along with its anti-sag bracket to access the CMOS reset jumper.
Now, I've been looking into this and it seems that either the default BIOS version had some bugs in the XMP settings or I had bad luck in the silicon lottery and the memory controller on my 5600X can't handle 3600 MHz. I have received suggestions to turn on XMP and then manually lower the memory clock to 3200 MHz and FCLK to 1600 MHz while retaining the XMP timing settings. It seems like a safe bet but I've been hesitant to try anything yet.
I'm NOT looking to squeeze out every last bit of performance and I know next to nothing about RAM overclocking aside from what I've read during the last couple of days. I'd rather have stable RAM with a moderate performance increase than spend days tweaking timings.
Currently the RAM clock is at 2666 MHz (plug'n'play). According to various software tools the memory ICs are Micron Rev. B series.
And yes, the sticks are installed correctly into slots A2 and B2 as instructed in the mobo manual.

I'm also fully aware that there is no foolrpoof way to get everything working on the first try but I'm trying to gather information to avoid any unnecessary hassle since my free time is limited.
In the motherboard manual there is a mention of a feature called "Memory Try It!" It's some sort of automatic memory overclock checker that should be able to revert to previous working settings in case the RAM config fails. Can anyone tell me if it's worth trying and does it actually work? Not having to clear the CMOS after every failure would save me a lot of time. I've upgraded the BIOS to the newest version 7C91vA8