Ram problem!

Real memory speed= 533MHz - Effective DRR2 speed= 1066MHz

I would play with the High Speed Memory option to see what is does and if it helps?

Latest BIOS?

I can't see any obvious problem apart from old chipset or maybe the kingston doesn't work nice with it?

I suppose its worth manually boosting the vDimm & Nortbridge voltage.

DDR2-1066 would have been the preserve of the uBer rich when that board came out, if indeed it was for sale at all . . .
 
Real memory speed= 533MHz - Effective DRR2 speed= 1066MHz

I would play with the High Speed Memory option to see what is does and if it helps?

Latest BIOS?

I can't see any obvious problem apart from old chipset or maybe the kingston doesn't work nice with it?

I suppose its worth manually boosting the vDimm & Nortbridge voltage.

DDR2-1066 would have been the preserve of the uBer rich when that board came out, if indeed it was for sale at all . . .

I mean it shows Effective DRR2 speed

Iv tryed playing with the High Speed Memory option with no luck and iv got the Latest BIOS

and manually boosting the vDimm & Nortbridge voltage.
 
Last edited:
Well that's it then . . .your out of luck! :(

I'm sure the Ram is fine, probability is that your circa 2006 chipset isn't playing ball with fast memory. Do some searching on google for reviews of your motherboard and see what other people did? . . . perhaps your board is an early revision and the later boards were ok with DDR2-1066?

It does state only DDR2-800 on the Gigabyte 965p-ds3 webpage although it has the right options in BIOS to help it doesn't seem to work :confused:
 
Dam it!
oh well thats it. Iv had a quick google all i can find is sites saying it dosnt suport it and sites saying it works with it!
 
I 've got a gigabyte mobo, to hit 533MHz or 1066Mhz DDR on the nose, I'm sure I was ocing to 3GHz at the time, 333 x 9 with a 8:5 ratio (1.6) that should give you 333 x 1.6 = 532.8
 
Back
Top Bottom