Model of the motherboard: Gigabyte GA-P55M-UD2 F8
Model of the memory: F3-12800CL9D-4GBECO
Model of the CPU: Intel Core i5 750
Hello all, first post here! I bought some replacement RAM for my system and yesterday installed it. I have noticed by reading around that to get it running at 1600, I need to set it to XMP profile 1 so I have done that in the BIOS. My question is, when I look at the timings, they look extremely weird (9-26-9-154 instead of the usual 9-9-9-24 for these sticks). I have attached a screenshot I took yesterday of CPU-Z running in Windows 7 64-bit to better illustrate my point. Notice that the timings here for the XMP profile are again strange, even different to what is listed in my BIOS. What could be the cause? Are there any other settings I need to change in my BIOS after activating XMP profile 1 as to not overvolt/overheat things?
Many thanks,
Ian
Model of the memory: F3-12800CL9D-4GBECO
Model of the CPU: Intel Core i5 750
Hello all, first post here! I bought some replacement RAM for my system and yesterday installed it. I have noticed by reading around that to get it running at 1600, I need to set it to XMP profile 1 so I have done that in the BIOS. My question is, when I look at the timings, they look extremely weird (9-26-9-154 instead of the usual 9-9-9-24 for these sticks). I have attached a screenshot I took yesterday of CPU-Z running in Windows 7 64-bit to better illustrate my point. Notice that the timings here for the XMP profile are again strange, even different to what is listed in my BIOS. What could be the cause? Are there any other settings I need to change in my BIOS after activating XMP profile 1 as to not overvolt/overheat things?
Many thanks,
Ian
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