mossmotorsport
Bronze Level Poster
So, much like @NoddyPirate I believe, I thought that by buying some of the highest spec kit out there, there wouldn't be a need for any overclocking.
And then....
Well the Crosshair VIII is made for overclocking, right?
The Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro marketing does reference specially selected IC's for further overclocking!
AMD talk about PBO2 and basically encouraging overclocking!
Asus GPU Tweak features a built in OC profile...
... with all of this it's been something of a red flag to a bull, and I've had far too much fun tinkering, with varying levels of success.
My question at the moment is, am I falling into a trap whereby the synthetic benchmark scores really very little real world difference? My RAM is a 64GB Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro Kit with CL16-18-18-36 timings at 3200Mhz. I've reduced the latency a little bit, and seen some minor improvement in benchmark scores.
My problem now however, is I may be reading too much into things, and am unsure on next steps.
I've successfully had the RAM running at 3600Mhz with CL18-19-19-35 timings, but Kahu RAM stress / error tests all show the RAM heating up to 68 degrees c, way too hot for my liking. The voltages persist at 1.35v, and I wouldn't really want to go higher than this. Voltage is the main cause of temperature gains, but this isn’t changing, so I’m not clear why it’s getting so hot? The RAM itself is Micron d-die according to Thaiphoon Burner.
One reason for really wanting to push for 3600Mhz, is so that I can have the FCLK frequency set at 1800Mhz rather than 1600Mhz. Unless I'm misunderstanding, unless my FCLK is running at 1800Mhz the RAM could feasibly be a minor bottleneck for performance on my Ryzen 5950x?
I guess a few questions, and an apology for such an unstructured post:
- 64GB 3600Mhz kits were unavailable via the configurator, so I opted for 64GB at 3200Mhz, was this a mistake?
- Would selling my current RAM, and purchasing a higher speed rated kit help to ensure no CPU bottlenecks, in addition to achieving marginally better FPS (this is matched with an Asus ROG Strix OC 3090)
- Temperatures seem to only marginally increase at 3400Mhz, I can manually set the FCLK in the BIOS to a frequency to match, as this is an odd / unusual frequency, could this be counter productive?
- Should my focus be on achieving the tightest timings possible with 3200Mhz, and accept that the infinity fabric won't be running at its fullest potential?
- Should I stop the benchmarks, and just enjoy what I have?! Although the fettling has been a bit of a giggle!
Cheers in advance!
Edit: The 64GB is used for extensive Photoshop, Lightroom, Virtualisation (Kali Linux, Nessus) and various other legitimate uses. I'd rather stick with this level if possible.
And then....
Well the Crosshair VIII is made for overclocking, right?
The Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro marketing does reference specially selected IC's for further overclocking!
AMD talk about PBO2 and basically encouraging overclocking!
Asus GPU Tweak features a built in OC profile...
... with all of this it's been something of a red flag to a bull, and I've had far too much fun tinkering, with varying levels of success.
My question at the moment is, am I falling into a trap whereby the synthetic benchmark scores really very little real world difference? My RAM is a 64GB Corsair Vengeance RGB Pro Kit with CL16-18-18-36 timings at 3200Mhz. I've reduced the latency a little bit, and seen some minor improvement in benchmark scores.
My problem now however, is I may be reading too much into things, and am unsure on next steps.
I've successfully had the RAM running at 3600Mhz with CL18-19-19-35 timings, but Kahu RAM stress / error tests all show the RAM heating up to 68 degrees c, way too hot for my liking. The voltages persist at 1.35v, and I wouldn't really want to go higher than this. Voltage is the main cause of temperature gains, but this isn’t changing, so I’m not clear why it’s getting so hot? The RAM itself is Micron d-die according to Thaiphoon Burner.
One reason for really wanting to push for 3600Mhz, is so that I can have the FCLK frequency set at 1800Mhz rather than 1600Mhz. Unless I'm misunderstanding, unless my FCLK is running at 1800Mhz the RAM could feasibly be a minor bottleneck for performance on my Ryzen 5950x?
I guess a few questions, and an apology for such an unstructured post:
- 64GB 3600Mhz kits were unavailable via the configurator, so I opted for 64GB at 3200Mhz, was this a mistake?
- Would selling my current RAM, and purchasing a higher speed rated kit help to ensure no CPU bottlenecks, in addition to achieving marginally better FPS (this is matched with an Asus ROG Strix OC 3090)
- Temperatures seem to only marginally increase at 3400Mhz, I can manually set the FCLK in the BIOS to a frequency to match, as this is an odd / unusual frequency, could this be counter productive?
- Should my focus be on achieving the tightest timings possible with 3200Mhz, and accept that the infinity fabric won't be running at its fullest potential?
- Should I stop the benchmarks, and just enjoy what I have?! Although the fettling has been a bit of a giggle!
Cheers in advance!
Edit: The 64GB is used for extensive Photoshop, Lightroom, Virtualisation (Kali Linux, Nessus) and various other legitimate uses. I'd rather stick with this level if possible.
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