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Ok I can change VCCIO to 1.2 but System Agent Voltage wants me to enter it as some kind of offset.
Somehow my Sys Agent voltage is now just 0.976V (IIRC it was at 1.36V) and I can't seen to change it no matter what I do, I enter values in the offset and it doesn't change the main value at all.
Thanks, I need to get a bit of a handle on how changing the voltage works on this BIOS, and yeah I had no problem with my last ASUS board (z270 TUF Mark 1) running these very same RAM sticks at 3200MHz with XMP.I suggest running your RAM at 1.4v first before playing with IO and SA.
Memory speed and timings can have quite an effect on frame time, which we can perceive as smoothness. You are finding out that various motherboards can deal with exactly the same memory sticks quite differently. As @Danny75 has pointed out the default voltages given to SA and IO can be too little or way over the top.
For my Z390 motherboard I remember Buildzoid stating that anything over 1.35v for SA and IO could potentially damage the CPU yet when set to XMP my motherboard would set them to 1.38v. I've got them tuned and overclocked quite a lot but the SA and IO are at ~1.27v
Your 3200 RAM is decent but I would definitely recommend getting higher specced RAM with tighter timings to get the best out of the other components in your system. I'm a little surprised as from my experience Asus are one of the better manufactures when it's coming to setting up RAM properly and running it at optimised speeds.
You definitely have to have that jumper enabled to change those values manually, when you hover over the Auto setting in the BIOS a message is shown saying that the jumper needs switching before you can do anything.
Simple, just change the DDR Voltage from 1.35v to 1.40, no need to try higher. I suspect you may then be able to run at XMP without crashing. If not that is when you need to looking at SA and IO or other issues with the RAM.
No worries, I didn't have to do that on my old Asus board so maybe it's a relatively new thing.My bad then. Quirky method which I'd never heard of before but I guess they'll have their reasons. Thank you for correcting me on that.
@MartinPrince 's suggestion could be even easier if it works out.
As I don't have the precise same motherboard I can't check but you shouldn't have to play with any jumpers to change the standard DRam voltage, neither should you need to change any 'offset' settings. It *should* be fairly straight forward to change DRam voltage to manual and set it to 1.4v. Especially on decent Asus motherboards.I couldn't figure it out for whatever reason, after switching the OC jumper on the board I could switch VCCIO Mem OC to manual and enter a voltage manually just fine but when I clicked on CPU System Agent Voltage it gave me the options of Auto, Manual and Offset, neither Auto or Manual would let me manually enter a voltage soi clicked on Offset which gave me a new sub menu where I could enter a value (max 0.999) so I wasn't really sure what to do with that, I tried entering a few different values but didn't see the voltage change and because I didn't know exactly what I was doing when entering values in the Offset box I didn't want to save and exit to apply them.
I'll get a photo up shortly so you can see what I've been trying to do.As I don't have the precise same motherboard I can't check but you shouldn't have to play with any jumpers to change the standard DRam voltage, neither should you need to change any 'offset' settings. It *should* be fairly straight forward to change DRam voltage to manual and set it to 1.4v. Especially on decent Asus motherboards.
Simple, just change the DDR Voltage from 1.35v to 1.40, no need to try higher. I suspect you may then be able to run at XMP without crashing. If not that is when you need to looking at SA and IO or other issues with the RAM.
I have no idea tbh, it worked fine with XMP on my last ASUS board.Is your RAM on the compatibility list?
Will do.Have a look at the qualifying list for your MB on Asus site.
Apparently not, mine is CMD32GX4M2C3200C16 which does not appear in their list here (https://rog.asus.com/uk/motherboards/rog-strix/rog-strix-z590-e-gaming-wifi-model/helpdesk_cpu). Does that really make that much difference then?Is your RAM on the compatibility list?
Apparently not, mine is CMD32GX4M2C3200C16 which does not appear in their list here (https://rog.asus.com/uk/motherboards/rog-strix/rog-strix-z590-e-gaming-wifi-model/helpdesk_cpu). Does that really make that much difference then?