Timings Gskill 6000mhz cl32 16x2 and 7800x3d

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Good afternoon I have some gskill 6000mhz cl32 ram, in a system composed of a b650 m asrock and a 7800x3d I would like to tune them to leave them in cl30 6000mhz. I have tried to use buldzoig's guides, but there is no profile that works for me. Could you recommend one?
 
There's zero chance that anyone on this forum knows more than Buildzoid.

What guides did you follow and what exact settings have you tried? You'll need to list all voltages (DDR, SOC, etc) and exact timings but even then, without the RAM infront of me, I don't think I'd be able to tell you exactly what settings to use since memory overclocking requires a good motherboard, good IMC for your CPU to do anything impressive.

You'll probably need to do a manual OC where you start off with loose timings at 6000 MT/s and then lower each one at a time, documenting your process on paper, and stopping when you start to get lock ups/BSOD.

Unless you're prepared to put in a couple days effort testing individual latency settings and then another couple days testing the RAM to make sure that there's no dataloss/corruption from the OC, I might suggest just using the existing 6000 MT/s CL32 profile and leaving it at that.

6000CL32 is fast enough and you might see an improvement but it might be a small improvement at best.
 
There's zero chance that anyone on this forum knows more than Buildzoid.

What guides did you follow and what exact settings have you tried? You'll need to list all voltages (DDR, SOC, etc) and exact timings but even then, without the RAM infront of me, I don't think I'd be able to tell you exactly what settings to use since memory overclocking requires a good motherboard, good IMC for your CPU to do anything impressive.

You'll probably need to do a manual OC where you start off with loose timings at 6000 MT/s and then lower each one at a time, documenting your process on paper, and stopping when you start to get lock ups/BSOD.

Unless you're prepared to put in a couple days effort testing individual latency settings and then another couple days testing the RAM to make sure that there's no dataloss/corruption from the OC, I might suggest just using the existing 6000 MT/s CL32 profile and leaving it at that.

6000CL32 is fast enough and you might see an improvement but it might be a small improvement at best.
If i put the easy timings of buildzoid, should i test it, or it can work fine without spending days of testing?
 
If i put the easy timings of buildzoid, should i test it, or it can work fine without spending days of testing?
You should still test any overclock you do to avoid data corruption buuuut you can do a quick test if you use RAM intense tests like Testmem5 with the ANTA777 extreme preset and Y-Cruncher (I don't know the intense settings for Y-Cruncher).

What I suggest you do is write out all of your stock RAM settings (timings and voltages) on a piece of paper and then manually set each one using safe very safe settings, use the machine for 5 mins to see if it BSOD, do a quick RAM test and then try a more aggresive overclock.

A small overclock is worth considering as you'll see an improvement and it's easier to get stable. Once you start trying to go for more advanced overclocks, it gets harder and harder and yields less and less improvement.
 
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