OK so I'm trying to find a way to successfully run DDR3 memory @ 2400 MHz with this motherboard with RELIABILITY (Prime95 for 1 hour). This board seems to love 2133 MHz RAM but hate 2400 (becomes unstable all else equal)!
I previously was using G.Skill Ripjaws 2133 ram using 11-11-11-30 1.6v and it's setup using the BIOS detected XMP Profile 1. This worked just fine. I needed another set of RAM and found a deal on G.Skill Trident 2400 ram with 10-12-12-31 1.65v settings. Interestingly, I wanted to try it in the same system. First off, I could NOT successfully get the new 2400 RAM to be detected using XMP profiles. It kept showing the timings in XMP from the
previous memory. In desperation, I decided to try re-flashing the F6 BIOS (same version) dated 5/28/14 and *Voila* it finally was able to read the new XMP timings! This leads one to wonder
is there no other way to get this mobo to re-detect XMP timings when changing RAM (same 2 of 4 sockets) without a re-flash of the BIOS???Secondly, now that I can use the XMP timings for 2400 (in the BIOS as XMP profile #1), I can see it correctly applying the new timings and slightly higher voltage. But no matter what voltages I try (stock, +0.05v to NB core, +0.10v to NB core) I can't run this build stable in Windows 7 x64 to even get 20 minutes in Prime95 (blended). However, if i simply change the memory multiplier to 21.33 (to have it run at 2133 MHz) the BIOS picks 9-11-12-28 1.65v (seems reasonable) and the system is perfectly stable! I can run Prime95 for over 1.5 hours no problem. NOTE: I was able to run Memtest 5.01 from a USB stick and find no errors with the new memory at 2400 MHz. Memtest defaults to only one CPU core for the test. So I know the RAM is solid.
So the question is, with the latest F6 BIOS, is there some voltage changes, Northbridge freq/voltage adjustment, etc. I need to make to get this reliable @ 2400? I saw a G.Skill rep state that sometimes adding 0.1v to the CPU-NB helps AMD run memory stable as if it needs the boost at higher memory speeds. I've tried setting CPU Load and NB Load to Extreme and Standard, with no difference. I've also tried adding up to 0.11v to the NB core and no luck. Does anyone have any other suggestions. I know that the difference between 2133 (CL9) and 2400 (CL10) is small, but it would be nice to run on auto-detect settings reliably since the board seems to detect the XMP profile now for the G.Skill Trident 2400 RAM.