cancel
Showing results for 
Search instead for 
Did you mean: 

XMP Crashes 2 Games but Passes Stress Test

stackoverflow13
Level 9
Just wondering if anyone else has seen this. If I enable xmp (ram is rated 3000mghz kingston hyper-x). Both The Division * Hitman (2016) will crash after a few minutes. Hower passes both superpi & memtest. This occurs even at milder overclocks such as 2600 or 2800. the only stable is 2400.
CPU is auto clocked @44.
It's ok at default cpu clock. Just don't understand how it can pass realbench, super, & memtest for 12hrs+ but can't manage a game

Those are the only 2 I have come across so far
Any thoughts/help anyone? TIA
Asus Maximus XI Formula: i9 9900k @ 5.2 GHz: 2x8GB team group Xtreem Edition @4000Mhz: 2xRTX 2080TI: 1xSamsung 970 Pro, 3xSamsung 860 pro 2TB ssd: Creative Zxr: Custom water cooled loop: 2xAsus PG27UQ 4k @144Hz Gsync.
3,158 Views
3 REPLIES 3

drop4205
Level 12
Not all cpu can overclock the ram and a stress test doesnt always tell how it will do in the real world. Have you tried setting the ram voltages and timings manually and not using xmp?
Maximus XI Formula, I9-9900k, Phantex Evolove X, Seasonic Titanium 850W, Custom loop PE360+SE360 Rad, G.Skill Trident Z F4-3200C14 32g, Nvidia Reference RTX 2080 TI, Samsung 970 EVO Plus 1Tb, Windows 11

I have tried, doesn't seem to work.As mentioned what is strange is that it is in only 2 games all others are fine such as GTAV Tomb Raider, XCOM2 etc
Asus Maximus XI Formula: i9 9900k @ 5.2 GHz: 2x8GB team group Xtreem Edition @4000Mhz: 2xRTX 2080TI: 1xSamsung 970 Pro, 3xSamsung 860 pro 2TB ssd: Creative Zxr: Custom water cooled loop: 2xAsus PG27UQ 4k @144Hz Gsync.

cekim
Level 11
1. As Drop says, the stress test is a good start, but the only way I know a system is really stable is after a few weeks of intense usage in linux.

2. RealBench is not useful in my opinion for proving GPU overclock stability. I've had ludicrous GPU overclocks pass its openCL, RealBench stress and benchmark and fail immediately in BF4.

3. As far as I can tell from 4970k, 5930k, 5960x and 6700k hands-on, the hardest part of OC stability these days is getting adaptive + speedstep not to trip on itself. A fixed manual voltage is the first order OC. Then getting the CPU/OS to really make full use of the chips functionality requires a second order of tuning and stability testing.