Learned something interesting today. Low latency B-Die overclocking won't boot into Windows unless you starve Windows of RAM.
"Samsung B-Die has a property where at very agressive settings it won't boot into Windows (consistent from XP through 10, older not tested) unless the memory available to the operating system is reduced.
In Windows 10, I do this by going to msconfig.exe and set maximum memory to 1700mb. If I don't set maximum memory when using the high voltage settings I used in the review, I get an instant bluescreen on boot that I can't bypass and sometimes a corrupted OS.
The general rule of thumb is 2100mb per 16gb of B-Die, but the amount you need to limit to can vary from kit to kit and can depend on the settings used. I am not sure exactly what factors play into this, and I don't know if Linux or other operating systems have the same issue. I still have more to learn about the technicalities of extreme overclocking.
As far as I'm aware, no other ICs have this issue. Samsung E-Die generally doesn't lose stability with voltage, and I've even seen someone running >2vdimm and really agressive frequency/timings with all 8gb available through memtest without issue.
Taken from review here of the ripped kit:
https://www.reddit.com/r/hardware/comments/hk22rg/teamgroup_dark_3600c14_quick_review/