Soldato
- Joined
- 22 Mar 2009
- Posts
- 7,754
- Location
- Cornwall
so whats the deal with SB only liking 1.5v-1.55v? what will happen with my 1.64/1.65v ram? instability or less overclocking potential?
Memory - Intel recommend 1.50v plus/minus 5% which means 1.60v is the ideal safe maximum, but we have found in our testing all 1.65v memory is fine. We have also found most new 1.65v like Corsair XMS3 will run at its rated timings with just 1.50-1.55v which is well within Intel specifications. So people upgrading to Sandybridge you can still use your old DDR3, but we do recommend you run it at 1.60v or less. We are shipping most of our bundles which feature Corsair XMS at 1.50v-1.55v at rated timings. We've also discussed with Asus and MSI regarding voltages for memory and they also confirm in their testing 1.65v caused no issues with reliability.
I believe the risk of higher memory voltage is long term reliability (ie CPU life). Personally I would spend the (most lilely very small) time required to get the voltage within spec (even if that means dropping the frequency down to 1333MHz - the real performance drop is tiny).
I would suggest running CPU-Z and looking in the SPD tab - this will show you what profiles your RAM is rated to run at. Since it is a DDR3 kit then more than likely one of these rated profiles will use a voltage of 1.5V.
TEAMGROUP said:Specification Content
Suitable for : Desktop PCs
Module Type : 240Pin Unbuffered DIMM Non ECC
DRAM Density : 128x8,256x8
Data transfer bandwidth : 10,664MB/Sec (PC3 10660)
CL-value : 9-9-9-24
Working voltage : 1.5V±0.075V
PCB : 6-layers PCB
Extra features : Yes
Warranty : Lifetime warranty
Ha, that is pretty funny.
In that case you should have no issue running that kit at 1.5V and with a sandy bridge system.
As for why XMP sets it to 1.65V, I have no idea. Does this setting achieve tighter timings than 9-9-9-24 @1.5V?
Data transfer bandwidth : 10,664MB/Sec (PC3 10660)
CL-value : 9-9-9-24
Working voltage : 1.5V±0.075V
Aye, based on those specs from the manufacturer you should be able to enter the settings manually and not have any trouble.
I believe the risk of higher memory voltage is long term reliability (ie CPU life).
nope, still 9-9-9-24so i guess i just manually set it to that and drop the voltage and im good to go?
but i have noticed in the SPD tab it says it should be 9-9-9-25think something isnt detecting it right.
set it to 1.5v and all seems goodnot sure why it doesnt do that by default
is it worth trying to get anymore from my ram like 7-7-7-21 or will it not make a huge difference?