Official GIGABYTE Forum

Problem with rams Fx8350-Gigabyte 990FXA-UD5 Rev3.0

Problem with rams Fx8350-Gigabyte 990FXA-UD5 Rev3.0
« on: January 07, 2017, 11:46:30 am »
Hey Support and community members of Gigabyte.
 
I just bought a ram kit which is 1866 MHZ CL9 2x8GB kit from Kingston.I'm dropping links here to check you guys out:
https://www.amazon.de/gp/product/B01G845OYI/ref=oh_aui_detailpage_o01_s00?ie=UTF8&psc=1
 
 
So my problem is I can't boot when this both stick is plugged to mobo.I tried 1-3,2-4 slots and no luck.I also did select X.M.P profile1 from bios(which is 1866mhz),no luck again.But when I do select profile2(which is 1600mhz) it's a go.
 
I thought FX-8350 is capable of running 2 sticks of 1866mhz rams.
So I found a way to run over 1600Mhz which is OCing FSB speed.Right now I'm using rams at 1720Mhz with CL10(?) timings.
I'm adding system images right here so that you guys can check it out.

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Hey guys!! New update! I made it work.I changed my CPU coolers' position.That opened up 4th slot.Now I'm using 2nd-4th slots together, 2 DIMMS at 1866MHz! Voila!! So happy to made it work! My money didn't go to trash can. LOL!
 
Also I changed FSB to Auto and OCed 8350 with multiplier.I'm sending screenshot to check by you if there anything is wrong!Cheers!
« Last Edit: January 07, 2017, 03:11:49 pm by burakksglu »

Re: Problem with rams Fx8350-Gigabyte 990FXA-UD5 Rev3.0
« Reply #1 on: January 15, 2017, 03:51:06 pm »
I got the same problem, any solutions yet?

Re: Problem with rams Fx8350-Gigabyte 990FXA-UD5 Rev3.0
« Reply #2 on: January 15, 2017, 08:13:31 pm »
For a short while (until I found that the CPU fan just won't run fast enough to keep the CPU cool enough), I had my Vishera 8350 in a GA-990FXA-UD3 rev 1.1.

I overclocked the CPU to 4400MHz using the multiplier. (That is, I didn't change the bus clock.)

I overclocked the GSkill 8-9-9-24 1866 RAM to 2133 with no problems. (Compiling Linux using all 8 cores pegs them for 5-10 minutes; I've build Linux (and GCC and 200 other pkgs many times with this setup with no problems.)

The trick may be to compute and use custom timings. Those wait states (8-9-9-24) indicate how much time elapses before data are ready to be read; the time is constant: it doesn't change with clock rate. The numbers are how many clock cycles it takes for data to be valid (ready to be read) at 1866MHz. To use the RAM at 2133MHz, you must multiply the value by 2133/1866 and round up to the nearest integer to ensure that the system waits long enough for the data to become ready. So 8 goes to 10, 9 goes to 11, and 24 goes to 28. In essence, I treat the 8-9-9-24-1866MHz RAM as though it is 10-11-11-28-2133MHz RAM. You can use bigger numbers, but that will only slow the system down. You might be able to get away with subtracting one from one or more of the numbers if the mfr's numbers were already rounded up significantly.

[CPU fan: I'm using the stock CPU cooler. When the system runs right, the fancontrol script will spin the CPU fan up to 6300 RPM; this is enough to keep th e CPU under 60°C (room temp is around 23°C). Alas, I've found that fan on the 990FXA really doesn't want to turn the fan faster than 3500 RPM. Even the ASUS M5A99FX Pro R2.0 has been refusing to run the fan that fast lately. I'd love to find out why the fan sometimes reaches those high speeds and sometimes does not. The PSU is a Corsair R750Mx with a single 63A +12VDC rail (largely because the Vishera draws more than the (about) 22A found on many two-rail PSUs.]