S
S
sleepnow2021-03-09 22:19:01
Windows
sleepnow, 2021-03-09 22:19:01

BSOD DDR4 3200mhz - profile settings?

Gentlemen, help is needed.
I have Ryzen 3600, gigabyte b550m ds3h
HyperX Fury RGB DDR4 3200 (PC 25600) DIMM 288 pin, 8 GB 2 pcs. 1.35 V V, CL 16, HX432C16FB3AK2/16
Here are 2 8 GB sticks installed in dual-channel mode.

About a week ago, 16 GB was not enough for me, it took 32. Do not throw slippers - in my Uryupinsk there was no 8 + 8 anywhere - I took one 16 GB bar from the same series.
RAM HyperX Fury 16GB 3200Mhz RGB CL16 (HX432C16FB3A/16)

As a result, the system has 32 GB.
After some time, I flashed the BIOS to the last one, the profile settings and the CPU were thrown off - after installing them (the default profile 16-18-18-36 seems to be) - I began to catch bsod. I ran it with memtest - errors fell after 7-8 runs.
"strange", I thought - after all, they used to work OK on 3200, and the specification supports profiles and 3200. I haven't collected pieces of iron for a long time - this may be due to the fact that there are 3 of them (dice), 8+8+ 16 and not 4 types 8+8+16+16?
As a result, after a couple of reboots, the memory passed the memtest, but again the bsod. I dropped it to "auto" - it started up at a low frequency of 2400 mhz, which does not suit me.
Tell me - how to be? this may be due to the lack of a second die (sister for 16)

Answer the question

In order to leave comments, you need to log in

1 answer(s)
D
Dmitry Roo, 2021-03-09
@sleepnow

You just didn't win the RAM lottery on Ryzen.
If you read your memory specification ( https://www.kingston.com/dataSheets/HX432C16FB3A_16.pdf ) you will see that it is not 3200 but 2400. 2400 is straight iron, a guarantee, and everything else is overclocking. Plus, on four slots, not every bar will run at full speed (see QVL for your m/b).
Unfortunately, you don't have many options:
1. The best one - get rid of the whole set and buy 2x16. Preferably 3600. And definitely from the QVL of your motherboard.
2. Try to draw from what is at least 2933-3000. It might work.
3. Accept failure and trade speed for stability.

Didn't find what you were looking for?

Ask your question

Ask a Question

731 491 924 answers to any question