@chris74 this is what i do (others may have a better/more efficient way though)
1) run the ram at stock, set soc voltage to 1.1v (can run vsoc at 1.2v max, but ideally < 1.15v, and best is <1.125v)
2) bump up the IF to 1900 and test stability - if unstable then run IF at 1867 and then test stability (most chips will do 1900, all chips will do 1867 iirc)
3) once you've confirmed the max possible IF clocks -> then start playing around with the ram
4) few ways of doing this - either start high and then go down if fails stability test (high = 1900 DDR + 1.45V + looser timings eg C20)
5) if passes, then keep dropping latencies until becomes unstable then go back to last stable config
(4+5) ryzen dram calc should give a reasonable indication of what to expect, but it's not that accurate for e-die, so there will be a bit of variation
1) run the ram at stock, set soc voltage to 1.1v (can run vsoc at 1.2v max, but ideally < 1.15v, and best is <1.125v)
2) bump up the IF to 1900 and test stability - if unstable then run IF at 1867 and then test stability (most chips will do 1900, all chips will do 1867 iirc)
3) once you've confirmed the max possible IF clocks -> then start playing around with the ram
4) few ways of doing this - either start high and then go down if fails stability test (high = 1900 DDR + 1.45V + looser timings eg C20)
5) if passes, then keep dropping latencies until becomes unstable then go back to last stable config
(4+5) ryzen dram calc should give a reasonable indication of what to expect, but it's not that accurate for e-die, so there will be a bit of variation