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Kappa Neko
...lives for biotic explosions. And cheesecake!
4,188
Oct 18, 2016 21:17:18 GMT
October 2016
kappaneko
Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, Mass Effect Andromeda
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Post by Kappa Neko on Jun 2, 2023 13:37:07 GMT
Huh. OK. Looks like the info on the shop website I checked was incorrect then. Found 5600 as non OC speed on a different website. Weird. Will add this board to the list. Current price is too high for my liking but maybe I can get a good deal in a month or so. Not really in a rush, just impatient. Check the QVL (Qualified Vendors' List) on the Gigabyte website if you want to match RAM with a particular motherboard. For all the motherboards and RAM comparisons Gigabyte has a list for all the compatibility comparisons they have matched...and the list is quite extensive. Odds are quite good that you will find that the RAM you bought will match the board of your choice.....And if it doesn't, they will at the very least give you a comparable and competitive model that they have tested with good results. It's not about compatibility of the RAM model (which shouldn't be an issue I hope!) but about native speed support so that I don't have to overclock. Most of these boards support much higher speed but only in OC. I'd really like to keep the 5600 because that's at least not super slow. 4800 I don't want to do. I went with the slowest DDR3 before and would rather have the fastest non OC RAM that both the CPU and some boards allow. That seems to be 5600. Might be a really stupid requirement I set, I dunno... I just don't want to mess with OC and any possible downsides to the longevity of my computer. Of course if that means I have to spend much more on board somehow then I might reconsider to do minor OC to 6000 which shouldn't cause issues, I think.
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Atemporal Vanguardian-Debugger
N6
At sunrise there is the sunset.
To find the secrets of the universe: Think in terms of energy, frequency & VIBRATION -Nikola Tesla
Games: Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, KOTOR, Baldur's Gate, Shattered Steel, Jade Empire, Mass Effect Andromeda, SWTOR
Origin: NO. NEVER. AGAIN.
XBL Gamertag: No.
PSN: No
Posts: 5,220 Likes: 5,079
inherit
At sunrise there is the sunset.
2139
0
5,079
Atemporal Vanguardian-Debugger
To find the secrets of the universe: Think in terms of energy, frequency & VIBRATION -Nikola Tesla
5,220
November 2016
thelastvanguardian
Bottom
Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, KOTOR, Baldur's Gate, Shattered Steel, Jade Empire, Mass Effect Andromeda, SWTOR
NO. NEVER. AGAIN.
No.
No
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Post by Atemporal Vanguardian-Debugger on Jun 2, 2023 13:43:06 GMT
Check the QVL (Qualified Vendors' List) on the Gigabyte website if you want to match RAM with a particular motherboard. For all the motherboards and RAM comparisons Gigabyte has a list for all the compatibility comparisons they have matched...and the list is quite extensive. Odds are quite good that you will find that the RAM you bought will match the board of your choice.....And if it doesn't, they will at the very least give you a comparable and competitive model that they have tested with good results. It's not about compatibility of the RAM model (which shouldn't be an issue I hope!) but about native speed support so that I don't have to overclock. Most of these boards support much higher speed but only in OC. I'd really like to keep the 5600 because that's at least not super slow. 4800 I don't want to do. I went with the slowest DDR3 before and would rather have the fastest non OC RAM that both the CPU and some boards allow. That seems to be 5600. Might be a really stupid requirement I set, I dunno... I just don't want to mess with OC and any possible downsides to the longevity of my computer. Of course if that means I have to spend much more on board somehow then I might reconsider to do minor OC to 6000 which shouldn't cause issues, I think. That is what I thought I linked three on the previous page. I am still trying to find NEWEGG and AMAZON landing pages though. www.neweggbusiness.com/product/product.aspx?item=9b-13-162-084www.newegg.com/p/N82E16813162103www.neweggbusiness.com/product/product.aspx?item=9b-13-162-088
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Kappa Neko
...lives for biotic explosions. And cheesecake!
4,188
Oct 18, 2016 21:17:18 GMT
October 2016
kappaneko
Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, Mass Effect Andromeda
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Post by Kappa Neko on Jun 2, 2023 15:45:36 GMT
Unless I'm reading the specs wrong again all three only support 4800 natively? According to their own website that you linked. Can't seem to find them on the hardware store website at all I was going to oderfrom (that would be mindfactory.de in Germany, they usually are cheapest), they don't all seem to be sold. Weird. I can't believe how unusual a demand it is to get 5600 JEDEC support, lol. I also didn't realize that those speeds are relatively new considering those RAM kits are fairly cheap now at around a hundred euros. I keep seeing all these 6000/6400 benchmarks and assumed 5600 was on the slow side which makes sense for non OC, ah man. So I'll probably have to go with an MSI which is fine. I like MSI. I have an MSI gaming laptop from 2012 or something that I barely use anymore aside from music listening but it still works fine. Had two MSI GPUs. Didn't have them for long but no issues and quiet. In any case, you guys don't have to sacrifice your precious time any longer trying to find a board for me. Now that I know what I have to look for I can do my own targeted research. Thank you for that! In fact I've gone through ALL the affordable boards that computer store offers and what I came up with is what I linked. So yeah, not much to pick from. Still kinda hoping for a sale on a more expensive board. Two M.2 ports will do (although 4 would be nice, I guess) and 4 SATA though. Don't need fancy stuff like thunderbolt. You've all been very helpful, especially for the cooler. I'm gonna go with the Thermalright. That's just a great price!
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Atemporal Vanguardian-Debugger
N6
At sunrise there is the sunset.
To find the secrets of the universe: Think in terms of energy, frequency & VIBRATION -Nikola Tesla
Games: Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, KOTOR, Baldur's Gate, Shattered Steel, Jade Empire, Mass Effect Andromeda, SWTOR
Origin: NO. NEVER. AGAIN.
XBL Gamertag: No.
PSN: No
Posts: 5,220 Likes: 5,079
inherit
At sunrise there is the sunset.
2139
0
5,079
Atemporal Vanguardian-Debugger
To find the secrets of the universe: Think in terms of energy, frequency & VIBRATION -Nikola Tesla
5,220
November 2016
thelastvanguardian
Bottom
Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, KOTOR, Baldur's Gate, Shattered Steel, Jade Empire, Mass Effect Andromeda, SWTOR
NO. NEVER. AGAIN.
No.
No
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Post by Atemporal Vanguardian-Debugger on Jun 3, 2023 9:38:50 GMT
Unless I'm reading the specs wrong again all three only support 4800 natively? According to their own website that you linked. Can't seem to find them on the hardware store website at all I was going to oderfrom (that would be mindfactory.de in Germany, they usually are cheapest), they don't all seem to be sold. Weird. I can't believe how unusual a demand it is to get 5600 JEDEC support, lol. I also didn't realize that those speeds are relatively new considering those RAM kits are fairly cheap now at around a hundred euros. I keep seeing all these 6000/6400 benchmarks and assumed 5600 was on the slow side which makes sense for non OC, ah man. So I'll probably have to go with an MSI which is fine. I like MSI. I have an MSI gaming laptop from 2012 or something that I barely use anymore aside from music listening but it still works fine. Had two MSI GPUs. Didn't have them for long but no issues and quiet. In any case, you guys don't have to sacrifice your precious time any longer trying to find a board for me. Now that I know what I have to look for I can do my own targeted research. Thank you for that! In fact I've gone through ALL the affordable boards that computer store offers and what I came up with is what I linked. So yeah, not much to pick from. Still kinda hoping for a sale on a more expensive board. Two M.2 ports will do (although 4 would be nice, I guess) and 4 SATA though. Don't need fancy stuff like thunderbolt. You've all been very helpful, especially for the cooler. I'm gonna go with the Thermalright. That's just a great price! Its not a sacrifice its my secondary Job. 5600 is the max before you get into OC'ing. I guess some manufactures just don't want to push the envelope -more respect Asrock has gained from me. Third post: forums.tomshardware.com/threads/what-does-this-mean-in-the-motherboard-memory-specs-5600-jedec.3783856/
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Another Crazy Finn
11505
0
Nov 22, 2024 14:12:14 GMT
5,391
rewindbutton
2,779
May 2020
rewindbutton
Dragon Age: Origins, KOTOR
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Post by rewindbutton on Jun 3, 2023 11:30:55 GMT
I'd really like to keep the 5600 because that's at least not super slow. 4800 I don't want to do. I went with the slowest DDR3 before and would rather have the fastest non OC RAM that both the CPU and some boards allow. That seems to be 5600. There seems to be a bit of a confusion here. The 13700K has a stock speed of 5600 for DDR5. Anything over that is essentially overclocking. The board doesn't care about memory speed, it will do it's best to accomplish what you ask it to do. It's when you OC, that things can go wrong, and any of the components involved in the process can fail; namely CPU, board and memory. BIOS is where all the magic happens, and when you build a new system, the first thing you do when you boot, is check your BIOS settings. Your settings should match what the stock CPU and recommended memory settings are.
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11,066
Kappa Neko
...lives for biotic explosions. And cheesecake!
4,188
Oct 18, 2016 21:17:18 GMT
October 2016
kappaneko
Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, Mass Effect Andromeda
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Post by Kappa Neko on Jun 3, 2023 11:58:26 GMT
I'd really like to keep the 5600 because that's at least not super slow. 4800 I don't want to do. I went with the slowest DDR3 before and would rather have the fastest non OC RAM that both the CPU and some boards allow. That seems to be 5600. There seems to be a bit of a confusion here. The 13700K has a stock speed of 5600 for DDR5. Anything over that is essentially overclocking. The board doesn't care about memory speed, it will do it's best to accomplish what you ask it to do. It's when you OC, that things can go wrong, and any of the components involved in the process can fail; namely CPU, board and memory. BIOS is where all the magic happens, and when you build a new system, the first thing you do when you boot, is check your BIOS settings. Your settings should match what the stock CPU and recommended memory settings are. Hmmm really? I thought the board determined what speed is overclock. So if the specs say the highest non OC speed not requiring XMP is 4800 then it will only run at 4800 even if I have 5600 which is the max supported speed by the CPU. That's what I want to avoid, having to run XMP for my RAM 5600. Even if that's simple to do. I just do not want to overclock for warranty reasons and to have this system run as long as possible without issues. So now I'm indeed confused!
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Another Crazy Finn
11505
0
Nov 22, 2024 14:12:14 GMT
5,391
rewindbutton
2,779
May 2020
rewindbutton
Dragon Age: Origins, KOTOR
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Post by rewindbutton on Jun 3, 2023 13:38:43 GMT
I thought the board determined what speed is overclock. To keep things simple, from now on, when I talk about OC, I mean memory overclocking. CPU OC is another matter. So, the Z790 chipset supports speeds beyond 7000, but by default the speed is probably at 4800 MHz. If you use memory sticks that are @5600, you have to change the memory frequency to 5600 in BIOS. It's not OC or XMP, if you don't change the timings or voltage. When I talk about a board, that is good for overclocking, I usually mean a MoBo that has been tested at higher than specs speeds. Whether a board is a good OC board, is usually related to memory controller, chipset cooler and on-board power management. I suggest you read Intel's OC guide here: How to Overclock RAM
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1817
0
11,066
Kappa Neko
...lives for biotic explosions. And cheesecake!
4,188
Oct 18, 2016 21:17:18 GMT
October 2016
kappaneko
Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, Mass Effect Andromeda
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Post by Kappa Neko on Jun 3, 2023 13:59:16 GMT
I thought the board determined what speed is overclock. To keep things simple, from now on, when I talk about OC, I mean memory overclocking. CPU OC is another matter. So, the Z790 chipset supports speeds beyond 7000, but by default the speed is probably at 4800 MHz. If you use memory sticks that are @5600, you have to change the memory frequency to 5600 in BIOS. It's not OC or XMP, if you don't change the timings or voltage. When I talk about a board, that is good for overclocking, I usually mean a MoBo that has been tested at higher than specs speeds. Whether a board is a good OC board, is usually related to memory controller, chipset cooler and on-board power management. I suggest you read Intel's OC guide here: How to Overclock RAMOK, thanks for the clarification. How this works is very weird to me. Some of the boards I looked at labeled anything father than 4800 as OC. So I assumed OC=XMP, which is what I don't want to use. Now you're saying no it's not. But I DO have to make changes in the BIOS regardless. Hmmm. That link talks about XMP again. What I'm looking for is a board I can use 5600 RAM without having to use XMP/overclock it. I don't want to have to overclock anything even if it's safe and the RAM comes with an XMP profile. I want a board where the 5600 RAM works out of the box. Does that not exist?? I'm still confused as hell about this. :/
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Atemporal Vanguardian-Debugger
N6
At sunrise there is the sunset.
To find the secrets of the universe: Think in terms of energy, frequency & VIBRATION -Nikola Tesla
Games: Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, KOTOR, Baldur's Gate, Shattered Steel, Jade Empire, Mass Effect Andromeda, SWTOR
Origin: NO. NEVER. AGAIN.
XBL Gamertag: No.
PSN: No
Posts: 5,220 Likes: 5,079
inherit
At sunrise there is the sunset.
2139
0
5,079
Atemporal Vanguardian-Debugger
To find the secrets of the universe: Think in terms of energy, frequency & VIBRATION -Nikola Tesla
5,220
November 2016
thelastvanguardian
Bottom
Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, KOTOR, Baldur's Gate, Shattered Steel, Jade Empire, Mass Effect Andromeda, SWTOR
NO. NEVER. AGAIN.
No.
No
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Post by Atemporal Vanguardian-Debugger on Jun 3, 2023 15:06:04 GMT
To keep things simple, from now on, when I talk about OC, I mean memory overclocking. CPU OC is another matter. So, the Z790 chipset supports speeds beyond 7000, but by default the speed is probably at 4800 MHz. If you use memory sticks that are @5600, you have to change the memory frequency to 5600 in BIOS. It's not OC or XMP, if you don't change the timings or voltage. When I talk about a board, that is good for overclocking, I usually mean a MoBo that has been tested at higher than specs speeds. Whether a board is a good OC board, is usually related to memory controller, chipset cooler and on-board power management. I suggest you read Intel's OC guide here: How to Overclock RAMOK, thanks for the clarification. How this works is very weird to me. Some of the boards I looked at labeled anything father than 4800 as OC. So I assumed OC=XMP, which is what I don't want to use. Now you're saying no it's not. But I DO have to make changes in the BIOS regardless. Hmmm. That link talks about XMP again. What I'm looking for is a board I can use 5600 RAM without having to use XMP/overclock it. I don't want to have to overclock anything even if it's safe and the RAM comes with an XMP profile. I want a board where the 5600 RAM works out of the box. Does that not exist?? I'm still confused as hell about this. :/ Lets put it this way the CPU can natively handled 5600 and go higher with no problem but will need OC of the RAM to do it. However overclocking the CPU you could probably have RAM with theoretical speeds in excess of 1.0 Ghz! -impossible! -LOL. 5600 is the DDR5 RAM speed limit set forth by JEDEC -anything higher than that will be considered OC by them. XMP is in a way OC but only if you go for higher speeds but also tighter timings past 5600. However apparently by some motherboard manufactures -even 5600 may be considered an overclock. That all said there is no guarantee that RAM of a rated speed will even hit that speed. It is usually also pretty much certain that two RAM chips versus four will get you better RAM speed and timings in default.
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11,066
Kappa Neko
...lives for biotic explosions. And cheesecake!
4,188
Oct 18, 2016 21:17:18 GMT
October 2016
kappaneko
Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, Mass Effect Andromeda
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Post by Kappa Neko on Jun 3, 2023 16:54:05 GMT
However apparently by some motherboard manufactures -even 5600 may be considered an overclock. That all said there is no guarantee that RAM of a rated speed will even hit that speed. It is usually also pretty much certain that two RAM chips versus four will get you better RAM speed and timings in default. Sooo technically it would void the warranty of the board, right? I watched a video on how the board manufacturers are promoting OC but don't tell you that this voids the warranty. That's suuuper shady imo. But the way I understand they can't really tell if you overclocked so you just don't tell them to get a replacement... On what does it depend if the RAM hits max speed? If we're not talking crazy OC speeds like 7200 that sells for a ridiculous price anyway and might cause major issues and not be stable at all. I do hope my modest 5600 within CPU specifications do hit 5600. Otherwise what's the point? So again, sorry if I'm being slow: if the board specifies that anything about 4800 is OC then do I have to use XMP or not? I'd still like to avoid it. Probably being overly cautious and making my life difficult this way. But I'd prefer getting 5600 without having to tinker with it. Right out of the box 5600. The ASRock specs say anything above 4800 is OC, this means I'd have to unlock 5600, right? Still so undecided. >_< (Sorry if I'm being obnoxious.)
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Another Crazy Finn
11505
0
Nov 22, 2024 14:12:14 GMT
5,391
rewindbutton
2,779
May 2020
rewindbutton
Dragon Age: Origins, KOTOR
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Post by rewindbutton on Jun 3, 2023 18:23:32 GMT
On what does it depend if the RAM hits max speed? RAM doesn't have maximum speed, only maximum stable speed. That said.. DDR5 specification states speeds from 4800 MHz to 8400 MHz, which means those are the limits of the technology. if the board specifies that anything about 4800 is OC Then it's a lame ass board and suggest you stay away from it. When DDR5 was launched, it's speed was 4800 MHz, so it's probably an older board. New boards can go over 7000 MHz. then do I have to use XMP or not? You don't have to use XMP unless you want to. Back to basics: 1. You buy a board which says it's memory bandwith can go 7000+ 2. You have memory sticks that are rated 5600 3. When you first boot, go to BIOS and check the settings. Set the memory bandwith to 5600 MHz. If that's all you do, all good, ready to rock. You only use XMP, if you want to tweak timings and voltage. It's not seen as OC, because the bandwith stays the same. I don't recommend it until you are an advanced builder and know what you are doing. For the record, I've been using XMP timings for the last 18 monts or so without issues, but I've been doing that sort of stuff for a long time. Good. Don't make a decision until you've gathered enough information.
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✜ The Bunny Chaser
2824
0
7,723
Energizer Bunny 211
The world just opened up...l'm now hearing sounds that I haven't heard in quite some time!
6,479
Jan 15, 2017 18:43:23 GMT
January 2017
energizerbunny211
Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, KOTOR, Baldur's Gate, Mass Effect Andromeda, Anthem
Rumbler1138
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Post by Energizer Bunny 211 on Jun 3, 2023 19:12:31 GMT
Check the QVL (Qualified Vendors' List) on the Gigabyte website if you want to match RAM with a particular motherboard. For all the motherboards and RAM comparisons Gigabyte has a list for all the compatibility comparisons they have matched...and the list is quite extensive. Odds are quite good that you will find that the RAM you bought will match the board of your choice.....And if it doesn't, they will at the very least give you a comparable and competitive model that they have tested with good results. It's not about compatibility of the RAM model (which shouldn't be an issue I hope!) but about native speed support so that I don't have to overclock. Most of these boards support much higher speed but only in OC. I'd really like to keep the 5600 because that's at least not super slow. 4800 I don't want to do. I went with the slowest DDR3 before and would rather have the fastest non OC RAM that both the CPU and some boards allow. That seems to be 5600. Might be a really stupid requirement I set, I dunno... I just don't want to mess with OC and any possible downsides to the longevity of my computer. Of course if that means I have to spend much more on board somehow then I might reconsider to do minor OC to 6000 which shouldn't cause issues, I think. does your RAM have XMP? If you want your RAM to run at the advertized speed of, say 5600Mhz or (whatever), at least with Gigabyte, that is toggled in the UEFI by first enabling "XMP Profile (1 usually....1 is usually Default) though some Users can opt to store more....Upto 5, I think. Anyhoo, I digress. Once you enable the XMP Profile you will be able to set the Frequency and it should be able to be set to 5600 or even 6000 without any issues. For example, my DDR4 has a advertised speed of 3000Mhz. The default stock speed of DDR4 is typically 2666, I believe. My Intel 10900KF supports DDR4 frequencies up to 2933 (OC). But by enabling the XMP Profile in the UEFI of my Z490 Aorus Master, I can actually safely push past the CPU's base support and run my DDR4 at GSKILLS advertized speed of 3000 Mhz (albeit with a very slight OC, yes). Having said that, newer 12th and 13th Gen CPUs and RAM are much faster and have ability to support much higher frequencies, so it stands to reason that your desired speed of 5600 or even 6000 Mhz, I don't think would be out of reach. The good thing with DDR4 and DDR5 is.....Unlike with DDR3 and DDR2, the frequency of the DDR4 or DDR5 no longer has to match the Front-Side Bus of the Motherboard. I remember that being a painful caveat when hunting for DDR3; I always had to make sure that the FSB matched. But with DDR4 and 5 that is no longer an issue.
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0
11,066
Kappa Neko
...lives for biotic explosions. And cheesecake!
4,188
Oct 18, 2016 21:17:18 GMT
October 2016
kappaneko
Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, Mass Effect Andromeda
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Post by Kappa Neko on Jun 4, 2023 8:34:11 GMT
Then it's a lame ass board and suggest you stay away from it. When DDR5 was launched, it's speed was 4800 MHz, so it's probably an older board. New boards can go over 7000 MHz. Example:ASRock Z790 PRO RS. Natively only supports 4800 but can OC to 7200. So for my 5600 it means I go into BIOS, set 5600 and be done with it and I don't have to use XMP to push it further? And because it's just the standard speed of the RAM (and within CPU specifications) it's not considered OC? So I do NOT have to buy a board with native 5600 support if I don't want to use XMP? I still don't really get it, it seems...
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Another Crazy Finn
11505
0
Nov 22, 2024 14:12:14 GMT
5,391
rewindbutton
2,779
May 2020
rewindbutton
Dragon Age: Origins, KOTOR
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Post by rewindbutton on Jun 4, 2023 15:10:01 GMT
So for my 5600 it means I go into BIOS, set 5600 and be done with it and I don't have to use XMP to push it further? Yes. And because it's just the standard speed of the RAM (and within CPU specifications) it's not considered OC? No. If the board manufacturer states, that speeds higher than 4800 is OC, then it's OC. Warranty void etc. For example, MSI MEG Z790 GODLIKE is rated for: Memory Support 7800+(OC)/ 7600(OC)/ 7400(OC)/ 7200(OC)/ 7000(OC)/ 6800(OC)/ 6600(OC)/ 6400(OC)/ 6200(OC)/ 6000(OC)/ 5800(OC)/ 5600(JEDEC)/ 5400(JEDEC)/ 5200(JEDEC)/ 5000(JEDEC)/ 4800(JEDEC) MHz As you can see, anything above 5600 is considered OC. This would be an excellent board, but the price tag makes you wanna scream. So I do NOT have to buy a board with native 5600 support if I don't want to use XMP? Bandwidth and XMP have nothing in common. Forget XMP.
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1817
0
11,066
Kappa Neko
...lives for biotic explosions. And cheesecake!
4,188
Oct 18, 2016 21:17:18 GMT
October 2016
kappaneko
Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, Mass Effect Andromeda
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Post by Kappa Neko on Jun 4, 2023 16:06:29 GMT
No. If the board manufacturer states, that speeds higher than 4800 is OC, then it's OC. Warranty void etc. OK, crap. So then I did get this right after all, I need a 5600 native board. You all had me confused there for a bit. Which basically leaves me with MSI for cheap boards, like MSI PRO Z790-P WIFI DDR5 ATX. Gigabyte doesn't have a single cheap one with 5600 native, I believe. Nor does ASRock. I really like the ASRock and it's the only cheap one without customer feedback stating issues. Which doesn't really say anything. You can get unlucky with any board. So I shouldn't take this as a bad omen... Unless you suggest not worrying about the warranty and lie about it in case something breaks like everyone else does? Sly bastards, all advertising the OC capabilities of their boards and only mentioning the warranty goes poof somewhere in the fine print. Making boards for OC and then punishing you for actually using it. Imo that's false advertising and borderline a scam and should be illegal but whatever. So I have to decide if I want to take the risk with a board that doesn't support 5600 natively or not. Prices are similar. I'm just biased towards ASRock because my old one is still going strong and because I like the look of it. I haven't really compared the features closely but I assume they're about the same. What I have decided is that I won't move my OS to a M.2 SSD from SATA because it seems hardly worth it since I rarely move large files around. Undecided yet about updating to Win 11 or making a clean install. I know clean is better. I need to check how much modding stuff I would need to back up... Since my game installs are on a different drive I don't have to reinstall them? The file paths will stay and the games will run normally after the windows update right? Also on a clean install? I read I just have to verify the game files and add back whatever the windows update shot. And then I have to copy over my backed up documents for Fallout and Skyrim. Also did some research on PCIe 3.0 and 4.0 and the difference in game loading speeds is maybe like 2 seconds? So I'll save money and go with a 2TB 3.0 one, probably Samsung, added to the old SATAs with all my modded games on. Maybe another HDD because I'm running out of space there too. So what would you guys do about the board? Oh, one more thing: Is it worth it to return the Corsair Vengeance 5600 CL36 for G.Skill 5600 CL28 for about 10 bucks more? I have no idea if I'd get more frames/better gaming performance at all. I know that generally faster/better latency RAM does not warrant the price tag but is that true already for 10€ extra? I can't find benchmarks for this specific scenario.
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0
Nov 24, 2024 23:08:28 GMT
1,556
bmwcrazy
1,120
August 2016
bmwcrazy
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Post by bmwcrazy on Jun 4, 2023 20:00:43 GMT
OK, crap. So then I did get this right after all, I need a 5600 native board. You all had me confused there for a bit. Which basically leaves me with MSI for cheap boards, like MSI PRO Z790-P WIFI DDR5 ATX. Gigabyte doesn't have a single cheap one with 5600 native, I believe. Nor does ASRock. I really like the ASRock and it's the only cheap one without customer feedback stating issues. Which doesn't really say anything. You can get unlucky with any board. So I shouldn't take this as a bad omen... Unless you suggest not worrying about the warranty and lie about it in case something breaks like everyone else does? Sly bastards, all advertising the OC capabilities of their boards and only mentioning the warranty goes poof somewhere in the fine print. Making boards for OC and then punishing you for actually using it. Imo that's false advertising and borderline a scam and should be illegal but whatever. I think you're just stressing yourself out for no reason. I say just use XMP and don't worry about the warranty especially for a very minor overclock like DDR5 5600. There is really no way for Intel or the motherboard manufacturer to void your warranty just because you use XMP. From my personal experience, both AMD and Intel will honor it as long as you don't go out of your way and SPECIFICALLY tell them that EXPO or XMP was the cause of failure. So just keep your Corsair DDR5 5600 RAM and use XMP.
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Post by bmwcrazy on Jun 4, 2023 20:14:14 GMT
Oh, one more thing: Is it worth it to return the Corsair Vengeance 5600 CL36 for G.Skill 5600 CL28 for about 10 bucks more? I have no idea if I'd get more frames/better gaming performance at all. I know that generally faster/better latency RAM does not warrant the price tag but is that true already for 10€ extra? I can't find benchmarks for this specific scenario. A 5600 CL28 kit is gonna require XMP or manual "overclock" to reach those timings anyway. You need to raise the voltage a bit for the stability. I mean if you really cared about squeezing a couple more FPS from fast memory, you'd be better off spending a bit more and getting a 6000 CL30 kit instead. Haha.
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Post by Kappa Neko on Jun 5, 2023 6:29:54 GMT
Oh, one more thing: Is it worth it to return the Corsair Vengeance 5600 CL36 for G.Skill 5600 CL28 for about 10 bucks more? I have no idea if I'd get more frames/better gaming performance at all. I know that generally faster/better latency RAM does not warrant the price tag but is that true already for 10€ extra? I can't find benchmarks for this specific scenario. A 5600 CL28 kit is gonna require XMP or manual "overclock" to reach those timings anyway. You need to raise the voltage a bit for the stability. I mean if you really cared about squeezing a couple more FPS from fast memory, you'd be better off spending a bit more and getting a 6000 CL30 kit instead. Haha. Ah, see, that's good to know. I had no idea! OK, then I'll keep the Corsair and not worry about it anymore. Thanks a lot. And yeah, I'm probably overthinking the warranty issue. I think I'll just buy whichever cheap Z790 that appeals to me.
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Post by rewindbutton on Jun 5, 2023 11:50:16 GMT
So then I did get this right after all, I need a 5600 native board. Yes and no. 5600 shouldn't be a big deal for any board. But strictly speaking you are OC:ing the memory bandwith. I think you're just stressing yourself out for no reason. This. And I say forget about it, for now. don't worry about the warranty especially for a very minor overclock like DDR5 5600 Do this instead. OK, then I'll keep the Corsair and not worry about it anymore. Good. I'm probably overthinking the warranty issue. I'd say yes, you are. XMP is fine, if you 1. run benchmark without it 2. enter XMP settings/ use profile 3. run the benchmark again to see if it made a difference. You all had me confused there for a bit. These are confusing times. Many old truths have gone out the window.
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The world just opened up...l'm now hearing sounds that I haven't heard in quite some time!
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Post by Energizer Bunny 211 on Jun 5, 2023 11:55:46 GMT
Many of the truths we cling to depend greatly on our own point of view
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Post by Kappa Neko on Jun 5, 2023 15:49:41 GMT
OK, then how about this setup: 13700K (412€, bought) ASRock Z790 PRO RS ATX Intel DDR5 (218€) Thermalright Peerless Assassin 120 (47€) Corsair Vengeance DDR5 5600 CL36 (109€, bought) 2TB Samsung 970 Evo Plus M.2 2280 (109€)
Maybe another HDD on top, not sure yet.
Question: I could get G.Skill 6000 CL36 RAM for the same price. Would that make more sense now that anything above 4800 is OC anyway? 6000 CL32 and CL30 are 10 bucks more. What latency requires fiddling with voltage other than 28 we discussed already? EDIT: I watched a benchmark video again and the difference between 5600 and 6000 are basically nonexistent. Or would you still recommend it just because it's the same price for technically faster RAM?
I'm keeping my PSU (630W) until I buy a new GPU. Once I do I'd say 850W is enough? Do you think Nvidia will release a 16GB 4070? If not I'm seriously considerinf keeping the 1080Ti another generation.
Should I wait a bit longer with buying the rest of the parts? Do you think the prices will keep falling some more? Or might they actually go up again? Everything is already so much cheaper than six months ago. I don't really need the new set-up until Starfield in September. There's no other AAA title that I'm waiting for and until I have an RTX card I'm still putting off playing Cyberpunk. I'm just super impatient and jumped on the 13700K deal on Amazon, saving 30€.
(Sorry again for the endless questions and stupid ideas about the board..)
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Atemporal Vanguardian-Debugger
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To find the secrets of the universe: Think in terms of energy, frequency & VIBRATION -Nikola Tesla
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Post by Atemporal Vanguardian-Debugger on Jun 5, 2023 23:07:59 GMT
I'm keeping my PSU (630W) until I buy a new GPU. Once I do I'd say 850W is enough? Do you think Nvidia will release a 16GB 4070? If not I'm seriously considerinf keeping the 1080Ti another generation. If you want 16 GB on the GPU then most likely you may have to wait on the 5000 series or go into 4080 territory. With all the debacles 4000 has gotten I think Nvidia would be more inclined to just let it be than to give more alternatives. If you get a 4000 series or later -depending on whether GPUs get even more power hungry you may want to go with a 1000W+ PSU. Sometimes it feels like the old '80 ti's are the new '70 ti's. They added a tier to milk every last drop of money they can out of consumers. As to what Power Supply to get I would recommend Seasonic, EVGA or Corsair -IN. THAT. ORDER. Though if you find Gigabyte PSUs... AVOID LIKE THE MIDDLE AGES BLACK DEATH. The best option is the other three. Most would probably say go with bronze 80 -which is fine but a mute statistic as of late. Most PSU are all built to same standards these days -except Seasonic whose build quality exceeds others usually but take of that what you will. I will be a Seasonic fan-boy -hate me for it -I don't care -they deserve the recognition and will have it. To find out how much power you need use the link below: HOWEVER remember that its always best to give a PSU some head room of extra wattage.
Meaning if you a rating of 750 Watts add some overhead so the PSU isn't working at 100% load. If it were the PSU would degrade quicker. Leading to replacing the PSU sooner than the system. I always go about 1/2 to 2/3 wattage extra. Need 550 Watts I go 900W to 1000W. People will say its ridiculous -to them I ask do you have PSU still going 10+years later? No? Case rested.
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Atemporal Vanguardian-Debugger
N6
At sunrise there is the sunset.
To find the secrets of the universe: Think in terms of energy, frequency & VIBRATION -Nikola Tesla
Games: Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, KOTOR, Baldur's Gate, Shattered Steel, Jade Empire, Mass Effect Andromeda, SWTOR
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PSN: No
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At sunrise there is the sunset.
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To find the secrets of the universe: Think in terms of energy, frequency & VIBRATION -Nikola Tesla
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Post by Atemporal Vanguardian-Debugger on Jun 5, 2023 23:08:59 GMT
Should I wait a bit longer with buying the rest of the parts? Do you think the prices will keep falling some more? Or might they actually go up again? Everything is already so much cheaper than six months ago. I don't really need the new set-up until Starfield in September. There's no other AAA title that I'm waiting for and until I have an RTX card I'm still putting off playing Cyberpunk. I'm just super impatient and jumped on the 13700K deal on Amazon, saving 30€. My advice here is RESEARCH -especially if your building a system but still buying components. If you have done that then find deals -NOT deals sites offer you but deals you can actually see offering you a performance or reliability advantage. HOWEVER the last thing I would do is use pcpartpicker and build it there -in my opinion PPP isn't a very reliable website -unless its changed in the last few years. However it can be a good testing bed to try builds out but never take PPP as gospel that it will work. The tech market will always be volatile despite Nvidia's claim about Moore's Law being dead. New stuff will always be more expensive than old tech. At least till you hit the 3-4 year switch zone where old tech becomes antique tech and gets hard to find and you will either shell out a lot to keep what you have running or can't find replacements and have to upgrade either would be expensive. For instance the 2070 Super is right at a $999 and its already 2 generations behind -in comparison to the 4070 ti that is around $800+ and the 3070 ti is about $550. ALL OF THAT tech would be considered current. While your 1080 ti -while still a beast of a card would be considered an antique by now but with a price tag of: $ 750-850.
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Atemporal Vanguardian-Debugger
N6
At sunrise there is the sunset.
To find the secrets of the universe: Think in terms of energy, frequency & VIBRATION -Nikola Tesla
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Post by Atemporal Vanguardian-Debugger on Jun 5, 2023 23:09:41 GMT
Question: I could get G.Skill 6000 CL36 RAM for the same price. Would that make more sense now that anything above 4800 is OC anyway? 6000 CL32 and CL30 are 10 bucks more. What latency requires fiddling with voltage other than 28 we discussed already? EDIT: I watched a benchmark video again and the difference between 5600 and 6000 are basically nonexistent. Or would you still recommend it just because it's the same price for technically faster RAM? (Sorry again for the endless questions and stupid ideas about the board..) In my opinion most G.SKILL RAM designs are taller than other RAMs. However IF the RAMs are of a similar price and are of a similar height... I would suggest making the trade. The higher speed RAM means its been clocked to reach that speed -which means the RAM is at least tested at those speeds and if it has higher clock that probably also means better silicon in its construction -even it that speed is never utilized. I am myself a follower of this: "I want memory that runs at 3200mhz but I want it to last a decade..." *Find memory that says 4400 mhz* -there got the head room. Plus if anyone ever laughs at you for having slow ram. You could crank it up: "What were you saying?"
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Atemporal Vanguardian-Debugger
N6
At sunrise there is the sunset.
To find the secrets of the universe: Think in terms of energy, frequency & VIBRATION -Nikola Tesla
Games: Mass Effect Trilogy, Dragon Age: Origins, Dragon Age 2, Dragon Age Inquisition, KOTOR, Baldur's Gate, Shattered Steel, Jade Empire, Mass Effect Andromeda, SWTOR
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To find the secrets of the universe: Think in terms of energy, frequency & VIBRATION -Nikola Tesla
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Post by Atemporal Vanguardian-Debugger on Jun 5, 2023 23:09:53 GMT
(Sorry again for the endless questions and stupid ideas about the board..) The only time endless questions are not a good thing is when you decided to stop learning and when that happens breathing is no longer required so don't be sorry. OK, then how about this setup: 13700K (412€, bought) ASRock Z790 PRO RS ATX Intel DDR5 (218€) Thermalright Peerless Assassin 120 (47€) Corsair Vengeance DDR5 5600 CL36 (109€, bought) 2TB Samsung 970 Evo Plus M.2 2280 (109€) Maybe another HDD on top, not sure yet. The setup looks sound. I agree that if a company has not done wrong to people or has and righted the error or just are proven to be reliable then why not go with them. That said you may want to include an extra hard drive should one fail. I know it seems odd but hard drives can be finnicky but that can be done at anytime down the line.
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