The motherboard will, if left at default, load what it believes to be the optimum settings for RAM, in most cases it is probably 2T. The only way to get the 1T timing will mean changing settings and this enters the wonderful world of overclocking and tweaking. As I stated before getting to this will only be achieved by trial and error and may not be obtainable at all.
I know my PC is different but, in theory my RAM should run at 9,9,4,24,2T but I have 4 sticks of RAM and can only get it to run at 9,9,9,27,2T. On a different motherboard but the same model, the RAM will run happily at much tighter timings and is one of the reasons why overclocking is such a challenge.
One important thing to note here is that the image you have posted is using an Intel board and an i5 2500K processor and they handle RAM slightly differently to AMD processors.