04-16-2018 02:11 PM - last edited on 03-06-2024 08:56 PM by ROGBot
04-16-2018 03:24 PM
Guardas wrote:
It is a used set from the first owner who purchased the above-mentioned components two months ago (everything has a shop warranty, except for the processor that was delided - he used liquid metal - Thermal Grizzly Conductonaut, and the processor was already installed in the socket).
04-16-2018 03:55 PM
04-16-2018 04:16 PM
Guardas wrote:
Hello all!
I am a new user in this forum, where I hope to find help for my problem.
In the last days I decided to improve my computer, where I changed the motherboard, processor and memory.
The choice fell on the Asus ROG motherboard Maximus X Hero (without Wi-Fi), the Intel Core i7-8700k processor (has been delid) and the G-Skill Trident Z RGB 16GB memory with clock speed of 4133 MHz (the exact model is: F4-4133C19D-16GTZR ). It is a used set from the first owner who purchased the above-mentioned components two months ago (everything has a shop warranty, except for the processor that was delided - he used liquid metal - Thermal Grizzly Conductonaut, and the processor was already installed in the socket).
Of course, when transporting components, I removed RAM from the sockets, because of security, but once I've installed them back home, the BIOS resets to the initial settings.
Go to the particulars when I want to set the XMP profile for memory (2133 MHz by default), the computer is reset, where next on the POST code reader (Q-Code) there is b1. Yes, code b1, no 61. After this code, the computer resets again 3 times and then pops up after starting the computer that a POST error has occurred and to go to the BIOS settings. When I'm in them, I see that clocking has not occurred correctly and everything has returned to factory settings. I have also suggested an overclocking guide from Der8auer, but this does not give positive results. I also changed the memory of A2-B2 slots. Result? Negative.
I also tried to gradually change the DRAM Voltage between 1.3500v and 1.4000v, and the VCCIO / System Agent Voltage CPU between 1.31v -1.33v // to 2.0v and 2.375v and from the lowest half of 1.15v. but it ended with the same code error.
BIOS version, under which I performed OC data, is 1003 and 1101, but I did not attempt to 0802.
Other components are:
Air Cooling: Cooler Master T4
GPU: Asus Rog GTX1070 Advanced OC 8GB
PSU: Corsair CX750M 750W Green edition (NOT GRAY).
SSD: Crucial MX200 250GB
HDD: WD Blue 1TB
Case: NZXT s340 Window Edition
If I add something to myself, when I chose the day before, the TPU option in the BIOS (TPU 1) alone raised the memory timing to 3733 MHz, but I do not know on what values the other values oscillated + the CPU clock was also increased.
Thank you all for help, and I apologize for my English.
Regards!
04-16-2018 10:11 PM
04-17-2018 04:48 AM
04-17-2018 10:17 AM
04-17-2018 12:17 PM
04-18-2018 03:22 AM
ssuteck wrote:
You're going to have to overclock it the old fashion way. Voltage and timing tweaks over and over until you get what you can. Asus has informed me that unless there is an XMP at the end of the memory name in the QVL for your motherboard - ex. CMD16GX4M2B3000C15(Ver5.30)(XMP). Then the memory will not work in XMP mode. Not to say you can't overclock it, just that using the XMP mode is useless. XMP mode for the asus Z370 motherboards only goes up to 3000Mhz for everyone that I checked. All other motherboard manufactures that I checked, (gigabyte, MSI, asrock), have memory in their QVL's that have xmp enabled for the higher clock speeds. Most go up to 3600 and 3733Mhz while some go all the way to 4133Mhz. But not ASUS. I think they dropped the ball on this chipset.
So turn it to manual, set it to the 4133 Mhz, set your voltage to ~1.40 and the timings to 19-19-19-39 and start tweaking voltages and modes from there. Use the advice these guys are giving you. It will help you get where you want or at least closer.
04-18-2018 02:57 AM
Menthol wrote:
Checking the socket will if nothing else give peace of mind that the socket is not a problem.
Was there a preset in the bios for the former 4133Mhz settings?
Try setting XMP, manually enter 1.4 volts on memory and VCCIO, VCCSA from chart below