Thaiphoon burner not reading RAM

If you open CPU-z, it’ll indicate what brand memory modules the RAM uses.

From there, you can see how aggressive the timings are and get an indication of the die type based on how aggressive you can be with the timings.

Thaiphoon burner is quite loose with its timings, especially with the tertiary timings, compared to that guide that I linked you to so you’ll see better performance and you’ll have a better understanding of RAM after following it.

Timings are grouped into primary, secondary and tertiary timings and each have an impact on performance with primary having the biggest.

I would also write all of the settings down on a piece of paper as you go through the process of overclocking the RAM and get to a point where you are happy with the performance and stop.

Use Testmem5 with the ANTA 777 extreme preset, it’s one of the best ways to check memory stability.

If you want, post your exact memory kit model here and I’ll give you an indication of the memory type to help you out OP.

Edit: wording
 
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Latest bios and chipset drivers is all i can think of now.

If that still does not work, all i can do is refer you back to JollyJamma's post earlier.
Bios updated to latest version. I will give it up and check the link provided by JollyJamma. Thanks
 
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Lol Fanxiang, you actually think this stuff is gonna be top end overclocking stuff? The delusion in kids these days is just unbelievable
Can you read or not? If you did not read or you don't understand what you read go back to first post. I have wrote twice what RAM memory i am using.
 
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But it don't show memory type if it's B-die or something? I need more info for DRAM calculator for Ryzen.
Crucial Ballistix 3200Mhz MT/s is more than likely Micron Rev E. I've had a kit of it before.

Should do 3600 MT/s quite easily but doesn't do the fastest timings. The code you would therefor use on the DDR4 OC guide is M8E.

  • Primary timings scale with voltage but not the rest.
  • it probably could OC to 5000 MT/s with some patience but you don't need RAM that fast to get good performance.
  • Since you're on AMD, 3600 MT/s will be great as it runs the IF at a 1:1 ratio.
  • More than 3600 MT/s and you need to start overclocking things like the IF.
  • SOC voltage is very important - see here https://github.com/integralfx/MemTestHelper/blob/oc-guide/DDR4 OC Guide.md#amd-imc
  • Read read and read.
Once you've got your frequency, start dialing in the timings and you should see a good performance boost, especially with a 2 DIMM slot motherboard.

Extract to help:

  • MCLK: Real memory clock (half of the effective RAM speed). For example, for DDR4-3200, the MCLK is 1600 MHz.
  • FCLK: Infinity Fabric clock.
  • UCLK: Unified memory controller clock. Half of MCLK when MCLK and FCLK are not equal (desynchronized, 2:1 mode).
  • On Zen and Zen+, MCLK == FCLK == UCLK. However, on Zen2 and Zen3, you can specify FCLK. If MCLK is 1600 MHz (DDR4-3200) and you set FCLK to 1600 MHz, UCLK will also be 1600 MHz unless you set MCLK:UCLK ratio to 2:1 (also known as UCLK DIV mode, etc.). However, if you set FCLK to 1800 MHz or higher, UCLK will run at 800 MHz (desynchronized).
 
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Try disabling memory integrity check. Go to start type Core isolation then switch off Memory Integrity and reboot. That might help. I have had problems running tests and other programs with W11 and that enabled.
 
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