• Competitor rules

    Please remember that any mention of competitors, hinting at competitors or offering to provide details of competitors will result in an account suspension. The full rules can be found under the 'Terms and Rules' link in the bottom right corner of your screen. Just don't mention competitors in any way, shape or form and you'll be OK.

New Agesa released 1.0.0.7B, massive memory speed boost for Ryzen 7000 on AM5, up to 8200MT/s now stable on Ryzen!

Seems like we have the bios software available now /within weeks to support DDR5 @ 8000 MT/s, but will have to wait until new CPUs like Zen 5 is released, to properly make use of it.
 
Last edited:
my friend updated to 7c but now cannot run expo 6000mhz best they can get is 5600mhz, higtly frustrating, cant really go to 7b as he's got samsung memory and there were problems getting that stable, he was on 7a but every 4-6hrs his pc would crash under extended gaming sessions.

7c looks to be much better stability wise, just a shame 6000mhz dosnt work, its either the bios's or his 7800x3d that are the problem, i hope the next version will improve
 
will stay on B for now got my samsung sticks stable on expo 2 timings 6200 surprised to be honest :D

C is supposed to be better for Samsung, ive not read into it too much, but B was for high speed 1:2, and C was to try and get Samsung sticks running better.

This is where im at right now on C, im bouncing back and forth between B & C, I backed off to 7400mhz from 7600mhz to reduce stupid voltages 1.45v + for everything, and also allowed me to disabled GDM, all for next to no performance lose against 7600mhz

SoC @ 1.25v
VDD @ 1.4v
VDDQ and VDDIO @ 1.35v

CtHh2mb.jpg


ALlW915.jpg
 
What did you settle with in the end for stability (1:2)?

I didn't bother trying to get it stable as all the info said it was pointless running at 8000mhz - it was more of a lets see if it posts thing :D

I went with the general consensus and just 'down clocked ' it to c26 6200 at present ( still need to tune the FCLK ) and as you can see from the AIDA test 6200 tight is better than 8000 loose.


89hduZf.png


Now i've got a feel for these sticks i'll start playing, but anything past 1:1 seems pointless at the moment.
 
Last edited:
Testing some G.Skill 7200c36 (2x24Gb) F5-7200J3646F24GX2-TZ5RS @ 7800c36

CX3JI88.png



and some TEAMGROUP T-Create Classic 5600c46 CTCCD532G5600HC46DC01 @ 6600c30

cL8C9Vm.png
 
Testing some G.Skill 7200c36 (2x24Gb) F5-7200J3646F24GX2-TZ5RS @ 7800c36

CX3JI88.png



and some TEAMGROUP T-Create Classic 5600c46 CTCCD532G5600HC46DC01 @ 6600c30

cL8C9Vm.png
Hello, I have the same teamgroup kit advised by buildzoid. Bought on July, production is 17-21 April.
Did you remove the HS to check if they are A die?
Could you share your settings for 6600? I'm afraid mine are M die. Thank you
 
Hello, I have the same teamgroup kit advised by buildzoid. Bought on July, production is 17-21 April.
Did you remove the HS to check if they are A die?
Could you share your settings for 6600? I'm afraid mine are M die. Thank you
No sorry I haven't removed the heatsinks.
Timings and voltage settings for 6600 are pretty much covered in the screenshot. Vddio was 1.43v
 
I just looked at some Gigabyte AM5 boards, and it looks like many of the cheaper B650 motherboards officially support XMP speeds of 8000 MT/s (with some modules). Like this one:

Quite impressive really. They seem like the best company for DDR5 support.

But you'd need a higher end board like this if you want a PCIe5 slot for storage as well:
https://www.gigabyte.com/Motherboard/B650-GAMING-X-AX-rev-13#kf
 
Last edited:
Back
Top Bottom