Overclocking settings or guide for adata xpg dazzle 2400mhz

Toto_Samonte

Commendable
Oct 28, 2016
56
0
1,630
Hi,

Anyone here has a guide in overclocking adata xpg dazzle 2400mhz ram? This will be my first time to overclock a ram, just in case. :)

Specs:

Ryzen 3 1200
ryzen stock cooler
GTX 960
Asrock Ab350m pro4
Seasonic m12ii 520w
1x8gb Adata xpg dazzle
500gb hd

 
Solution
You're not going to really see any significant gains by overclocking that memory, and, it's likely you may NEED to overclock the CPU as well in order to get the memory to run at a high enough speed where ANY increase in performance is going to be even remotely noticeable. Generally speaking, for most users, it's best to simply set the memory XMP or AMP values in the bios and stick with that.

That being said, if you still desire to try overclocking the memory which is likely to create more problems than it solves, but can be done, then it is unlikely you will find any kind of model specific memory overclocking guide. Pretty much all memory uses the same procedure and techniques for overclocking, even across different motherboard...
You're not going to really see any significant gains by overclocking that memory, and, it's likely you may NEED to overclock the CPU as well in order to get the memory to run at a high enough speed where ANY increase in performance is going to be even remotely noticeable. Generally speaking, for most users, it's best to simply set the memory XMP or AMP values in the bios and stick with that.

That being said, if you still desire to try overclocking the memory which is likely to create more problems than it solves, but can be done, then it is unlikely you will find any kind of model specific memory overclocking guide. Pretty much all memory uses the same procedure and techniques for overclocking, even across different motherboard platforms. This should tell you most if not all of what you need to know.


https://www.tweaktown.com/guides/6899/ddr4-memory-overclocking-report-beginners-guide/index.html


Additionally, you see a lot more of a performance gain from running two modules in dual channel, than you will from any speed you could reasonably expect to overclock that memory to beyond it's XMP or AMP profile settings.
 
Solution