i7 4770k oc, 0x124 bsod advice.

I think you'd do 2400mhz with reasonable voltage,though I havn't a clue on haswell what the imc voltage is

loosen timings ect
 
Ioa/d and sa are the ones to tweak on hw for ram oc'ing, along with timings and dram voltage.
 
on z68/77 ive only ever had to up the vccio one/two clicks to reach 2200mhz

mostly they are fine on stock,but ive never gone above that speed,dram can go upto 1.65 and above without issue
 
mine are the TG's basically samsungs

have Ioa/d on offset + 0.05v which makes about 1.2v (i think!)

as wazza said stick em on 2400 @1.65v and try 10-12-12-31-2t-147 (for now) worth a shot??
 
If i can narrow the bsod issue down to just being a cpu oc issue. Ill adress this first then have a good play about with the ram again. Need to play a few more games to see if i can replicate the problem. It's quite intermittent as it can happen anytime from 2 - 20 mins ono in game. Event viewer doesnt show up any whea 19 errors for the bsod, unlike it did on my previous setup. With it simply raising vcore a bit would help.
 
124 error is cpu voltage (and can be memory related if more cpu v doesn't cure it)

101 error is 100% cpu v
 
Ill run memtest later guys to check. Also try the rog bench, been gaming just now and things were running fine with just the cpu oc on.
 
i got the odd 124 on the realbench v1.1 h.264 video encoding test.
went into bios and bumped vrin from 1.860v to 1.870v then redid the test and it passed everything ;) lol

haswell is so finky and fradgile, you can be stable in this and that and fail in this and that lol
 
Dont i know it, my vrins at 1.82, i'll give it a bump and see what happens

thats probably your issue to low vrin.
i would be very suprised if you did not pass it this time with 1.870v vrin
just remember though it will add a little extra heat to the cpu but will make your cpu more stable.

report back ;)
 
Well, vrin on asus is indeed cpu initial input voltage, ive had mine at 1.9 guys and still crash. With haswell, a straight basic cpu is easy it seems. Once you start to clock ram, it's a whole new can of worms.
 
i thought vrin had 2 stages, initial vrin (which is between bios up until the windows logo appears) then it switches to eventual vrin (vcinn?) to get into windows then the normal everyday voltages take over????
i'll up it anyway and see what happens


well got through it, i'll be interested to see if ambient temps are affecting in anyway as the heating in the house is off untill about 4pm

 
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