V4ever

Reputable
Jan 29, 2021
7
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4,510
So i have these ddr4: F4-3200C16-8GVGB and was wondering if i can squeeze any extra performance , tryed Dram Calculator for ryzen but didnt find Nanya under memory type.
Manualy did 3400mhz on xmp profile ,used memtest for 40mins no errors - was working good i guess . also in aida64 write/read speeds was increased and had less latency.
So would like to know whats could i do with them or just simply stick with XMP .(sorry for my english)

ZenTimings screenshot: https://postimg.cc/QFVrydXX
Typhoon screenshot: https://postimg.cc/w7r6Hm4t
 

Lutfij

Titan
Moderator
You run memtest for hours, not mins. Once you run it through it's paces with memtest, you put the ram through stress testing using real world scenarios.

Please list the specs to your build like so:
CPU:
CPU cooler:
Motherboard:
Ram:
SSD/HDD:
GPU:
PSU:
Chassis:
OS:
Monitor:
include the age of the PSU apart from it's make and model. BIOS version for your motherboard at this moment of time.

If you got DDR4-3400MHz, you're at the limit to what your memory controller and chipset can do.
 
So i have these ddr4: F4-3200C16-8GVGB and was wondering if i can squeeze any extra performance , tryed Dram Calculator for ryzen but didnt find Nanya under memory type.
Manualy did 3400mhz on xmp profile ,used memtest for 40mins no errors - was working good i guess . also in aida64 write/read speeds was increased and had less latency.
So would like to know whats could i do with them or just simply stick with XMP .(sorry for my english)

ZenTimings screenshot: https://postimg.cc/QFVrydXX
Typhoon screenshot: https://postimg.cc/w7r6Hm4t
That's already a stretch for those chips (Samsung b-die and Hynix a-die are best for OC) In real life, frequency alone is not enough, Cl and other latency settings can be just or more important and they usually get "worse" with higher frequencies. Net gain Vs. 3200MHz most probably less than 1%.