Naa. I can go to 2933 from 2666. Had to alter cas manually though. Soc 1.12 ram 1.355.1006 is a weird mess here. Waiting for next update.
For Asus Prime X370-Pro motherboard owners, the final 1.0.0.6a BIOS was posted today. Version 805.
http://dlcdnet.asus.com/pub/ASUS/mb/SocketAM4/PRIME_X370-PRO/PRIME-X370-PRO-ASUS-0805.zip
I've flashed my BIOS probably 15 times since I bought the board with many different versions from 0504 and up and I've not once loaded defaults. Of course it sets BIOS to defaults once the new one is flashed but haven't had to do it before.Remember to always "Load optimized defaults", Save, reboot, before you flash. Yeah, it takes you 5 minutes re-apply your custom settings, but it could save you 3 - 8 weeks if you had to RMA the board because you bricked it.
I've flashed my BIOS probably 15 times since I bought the board with many different versions from 0504 and up and I've not once loaded defaults. Of course it sets BIOS to defaults once the new one is flashed but haven't had to do it before.
I'm sure it's decent advice but I think it's mostly an old wives tale.
I've flashed my BIOS probably 15 times since I bought the board with many different versions from 0504 and up and I've not once loaded defaults. Of course it sets BIOS to defaults once the new one is flashed but haven't had to do it before.
I'm sure it's decent advice but I think it's mostly an old wives tale.
That gave me an amusing image of a bunch of old wives knitting in rocking chairs and chatting about the proper way to re-flash a BIOSI've flashed my BIOS probably 15 times since I bought the board with many different versions from 0504 and up and I've not once loaded defaults. Of course it sets BIOS to defaults once the new one is flashed but haven't had to do it before.
I'm sure it's decent advice but I think it's mostly an old wives tale.
lolThat gave me an amusing image of a bunch of old wives knitting in rocking chairs and chatting about the proper way to re-flash a BIOS
yes, the young whippersnappers will never know the struggle. some of us only had 1.44MB to work with
BIOS 2.40 seems to be holding up on my board very well; no issues to report. hopefully it stays that way.
Or having to overclock via soldering iron.. Putting a faster clock crystal on your motherboard, then crossing your fingers.yes, the young whippersnappers will never know the struggle. some of us only had 1.44MB to work with
BIOS 2.40 seems to be holding up on my board very well; no issues to report. hopefully it stays that way.
Settings don't always go back to default and the settings that do change or reset can be weird like on my Taichi. Up till it got to the 2.0's the Virtual stuff was on by default. Now every update turns it off. But memory and CPU settings have stayed.I've flashed my BIOS probably 15 times since I bought the board with many different versions from 0504 and up and I've not once loaded defaults. Of course it sets BIOS to defaults once the new one is flashed but haven't had to do it before.
I'm sure it's decent advice but I think it's mostly an old wives tale.
Yep. Got 25MHz up from 20MHz on my 386sx. Then plugged in Cyrix fpu. Cyrix fpu give that a thought... Strong sauce...speeded up excel screen redraw.Or having to overclock via soldering iron.. Putting a faster clock crystal on your motherboard, then crossing your fingers.
Ah the good old days erasing Eproms with ultra violet light.
Or having to overclock via soldering iron.. Putting a faster clock crystal on your motherboard, then crossing your fingers.
yes, the young whippersnappers will never know the struggle. some of us only had 1.44MB to work with
you had me at the word cassette. i yield. please, no more...
AMD "datasheet" says the value should never go above 1.05v. Thats an effective range of 0.9-1.05v. So I actually wonder how effective it is. and they say lower value is better for stability.Not sure what the default is, it has a range of 0.9-1.4V.
Voltage for the DDR4 PHY on the SoC. Somewhat counterintuitively, lowering VDDP can often be more beneficial for stability than raising CLDO_VDDP. Advanced overclockers should also know that altering CLDO_VDDP can move or resolve memory holes. Small changes to VDDP can have a big effect, and VDDP cannot not be set to a value greater than VDIMM-0.1V (not to exceed 1.05V). A cold reboot is required if you alter this voltage.
yep. I OC'd my 1600 by 12.5% and my memory by 25% (based on 2667MHz being the supported memory max).You will probably get better gains from OCing (or replacing) the RAM to say 2933 MHz. Getting 50 MHz more is how much, 1,25% gain? Not worth huge power/noise increase.
I bought a 1600 because the OC MHz/Vcore curve presents a 'wall' that results in a small absolute performance difference between the 1600 and the X version.Guys don't take this wrong way, we each make do according to what we're capable of; no innuendos, no offense. Just me failing to comprehend and honestly curious.
Why would you buy a 1600, 1700 or 1800 instead of its X variant? With the pricing difference being that tiny (contrary to the potential benefits), what exactly was your thinking?