tWTRS 3 is the minimum: possible, small benefit in latency
tWTRL 6 is the minimum: doubt you will get this to work, small benefit in latency
tRDRD/tWRWR SCL: 2 minimum but unlikely, 3 should be possible. Small benefit in latency. 2 works on B450, 3 on X570. Motherboard memory trace layout quality dependant.
tWR tCL-4 (10) minimum: possible, small benefit bandwidth and latency
tRCDWR 8 minimum: allows tCWL to go lower
tCWL minimum = tRCDWR. Hard to stabilise at high performance settings below 10. Leave tRDWR and tWRRD at auto while tuning this.
tRTP minimum = 2 x tWTRS.
tRDRDSD/tWRWRSD: only applies to dual rank sticks, set to 1 / 1 for single rank, 4 / 6 for dual rank
tRDRDDD/tWRWRDD: only applies when using 4 sticks. Set to 1 / 1 for two stick configurations.
tRP: tCL - 2 works well in most cases. Very minor effect on latency, used to adjust tRC value.
tRAS 21 minimum: will cause boot failure reading storage when set too low. Scales with voltage, 22 is possible at 1.5v with exceptional single rank sticks, 23 with similar quality dual rank. Allows reduction of tRC.
tRC = tRAS+tRP. Little effect on latency, used to adjust tRFC value.
tRFC = multiple of TRC, scales with voltage. tRFC too low can cause corrupted data to be written to storage - risk of killing an OS. Good effect on bandwidth and latency, particularly evident in memtest run times in ryzen dram calc. Motherboard/bios memory training affects tRFC minimum. Too low: no post, slightly too low: OS corruption risk. Below 230 @ 3800mhz is getting very risky.
Increasing SOC Loadline calibration will help stabilise your vSOC voltage. Ideally you dont want it to dip below its set value. As Guest2 is saying above it has an effect on your vDDG sub voltages so you want the vSOC rail to be as steady as possible and minimum 50mv above your IOD and CCD voltages at all times. You may as well manually set the switching frequency of the SOC phases to the maximum while youre making that change. There's so little power going through the SOC phases when using a CPU without an APU that heat and efficiency penalties normally associated with these changes are negligible.
If you can tune down your SOC, CCD, IOD and CLDO VDDP voltages when you have finished your memory and fabric overclock that can give your cpu some more power budget to boost with. These components form part of the overall package power used to adjust turbo behaviour. Even if you use PBO to override limits you can gain a little extra core speed by minimising these voltages. No effect if using a manual cpu multiplier or per ccx overclocking (PB2 disabled).