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ASRock X570 Phantom Gaming X

cadaveca

My name is Dave
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This. Wow... I hadn't noticed. It's not like performance will change much, but yeah, running BELOW platform spec isn't doing the platform justice. Wow...

I mean a potato would work at those speeds on either platform. It isn't testing much and leaving a bit of performance that EVERYONE would have on the table.. yikes... yikes. :(



JEDEC are simple specs/standards for the memory. It has nothing to do with the platform...just the base specs for the RAM and for compatibility. As far as the IC's under rated lower and anything above that overclocking... that is false. When I buy sticks of RAM, on the box it is rated to run at XXXX MHz, period. For 9900k, anything over 2666 is considered overclocking the IMC (not the sticks). For Zen 2, anything over 3200 MHz would be overclocking its IMC. You are only overclocking the RAM if you are going over what is rated on the box. Don't worry about JEDEC.

If brands want to show products in the best possible light, they should provide the supporting hardware. I mean I know its different here on TPU because of the global spread of staff, but... you know what going on and YOU complaining about it seems.... hilarious. ;)
 
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Benchmark Scores Faster than yours... I'd bet on it. :)
If brands want to show products in the best possible light, they should provide the supporting hardware. I mean I know its different here on TPU because of the global spread of staff, but... you know what going on and YOU complaining about it seems.... hilarious. ;)
Dave, it isn't up the AIBs to provide you with the right speed of memory for testing. Many sites have some around from memory reviews or other test system that would be appropriate/compatible, or one can simply ask for it (a site this big they will send it when asked, you know this). I don't recall what we had shipped with things (if anything), but we used GSkill Flare X kit @ 3200 MHz. If I'm a reviewer and know a platform spec is 3200 and I got sent 2400 sticks by an AIB as I think you are inferring, I would be on the horn immediately asking what is up and trying to land some 3200 MHz sticks. Certainly any one of the memory partners would have sent a 3200 MHz kit if asked. Worst case, it's procured after a launch review... but TPU is 5 boards deep and it has been nearly 2 months since release while still running 2400 MHz memory...

Like I said... yikes... but yikes with a perspective that I know performance wise it isn't a huge deal. Continuing and the way forward being to run the platform under spec is curious...............
 
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JEDEC are simple specs/standards for the memory. It has nothing to do with the platform...just the base specs for the RAM and for compatibility. As far as the IC's under rated lower and anything above that overclocking... that is false. When I buy sticks of RAM, on the box it is rated to run at XXXX MHz, period. For 9900k, anything over 2666 is considered overclocking the IMC (not the sticks). For Zen 2, anything over 3200 MHz would be overclocking its IMC. You are only overclocking the RAM if you are going over what is rated on the box. Don't worry about JEDEC.
Are you saying that if I run RAM at 3200MT/s on 3rd gen Ryzen CPU even at 1.35V, it is still within specs??
In that case , TPU should run 3rd gen Ryzen at default 3200MT/s.
 

Black Haru

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Yes. That is the BASE speed for the platform.
It's the maximum officially supported speed. It is not the base speed. I see where you are coming from, but my logic has always been to bencark boards in an "out of the box" state. So that if you go and buy an identical system you can replicate my results. The memory kit I use for testing (and all kits I currently have on hand) default to 2400 MHz. To run them at 3200 MHz would be an overclock, officially supported or not.
 
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Benchmark Scores Faster than yours... I'd bet on it. :)
That makes no sense (to me) to test under the platform specification speed. People can replicate the platform spec just as easily.

Memory will default to whatever the spec out as JEDEC. If your sticks are rated to xxxx mhz XMP it isnt overclocking the ram as they are rated at those speeds out of the box. If you have sticks rated to 3200 mhz and your platform and cpu is 3200 mhz, nothing is overclocked.

I dont know.. just dont see how you can test so far under the platform spec....especially when amd says the sweetspot is 3600/3733. A vast majority will be using 3200-3733 on this platform, not 2400.
 

TheLostSwede

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It's the maximum officially supported speed. It is not the base speed. I see where you are coming from, but my logic has always been to bencark boards in an "out of the box" state. So that if you go and buy an identical system you can replicate my results. The memory kit I use for testing (and all kits I currently have on hand) default to 2400 MHz. To run them at 3200 MHz would be an overclock, officially supported or not.
Does this mean you also don't update the UEFI? Or change any settings at all in the UEFI?

And no, it would not be an overclock if you're using RAM that is rated for the speed, since its an officially supported memory speed by the CPU manufacturer.
Likewise, 2666MHz on Intel would not be an overclock.
Considering your kit defaults to 2400MHz, it's still faster than most RAM that defaults to 2133MHz, so isn't that an overclock too then, using your logic?

Not trying to pick holes in your testing or methodology here, just trying to understand why and maybe to have you consider some things when you test boards.
 
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With all those comment I understand why there was so much perfs dif between all AM4 boards :wtf:
 

LBomb

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Hi All
Looking for some help with connecting this board up to a Corsair RM750x (2018) model#CP-9020179-AU. The mobo has a 8 pin and 4 pin connection (orange box), presumably for the CPU, but the PSU only has an 8 pin connector; as in no 4 pin connection. Is it OK to just use the 8 pin without the 4 pin?

Also want to check what the 24 pin connection (red box) is for and if it needs to be connected in addition to the above? Perhaps its for the actual mobo where the orange box is just for the CPU?

PS: First time build with a nice budget, so small words please :). Rest of the components are here fyi.

1577755769979.png

1577756368949.png
 
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Hi All
Looking for some help with connecting this board up to a Corsair RM750x (2018) model#CP-9020179-AU. The mobo has a 8 pin and 4 pin connection (orange box), presumably for the CPU, but the PSU only has an 8 pin connector; as in no 4 pin connection. Is it OK to just use the 8 pin without the 4 pin?

Also want to check what the 24 pin connection (red box) is for and if it needs to be connected in addition to the above? Perhaps its for the actual mobo where the orange box is just for the CPU?

PS: First time build with a nice budget, so small words please :). Rest of the components are here fyi.

View attachment 140893
View attachment 140894
8 pin is fine for everything, unless you are doing LN2 overclocking.
And you need to connect the 24pin (red highlight) power connector. Without it the pc will not power up.
 
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Benchmark Scores Faster than yours... I'd bet on it. :)
Hi All
Looking for some help with connecting this board up to a Corsair RM750x (2018) model#CP-9020179-AU. The mobo has a 8 pin and 4 pin connection (orange box), presumably for the CPU, but the PSU only has an 8 pin connector; as in no 4 pin connection. Is it OK to just use the 8 pin without the 4 pin?

Also want to check what the 24 pin connection (red box) is for and if it needs to be connected in addition to the above? Perhaps its for the actual mobo where the orange box is just for the CPU?

PS: First time build with a nice budget, so small words please :). Rest of the components are here fyi.

View attachment 140893
Small words you say? Read your mobo manual. :)

The manual states that 4-pin EPS is optional as well as detailing the 24-pin ATX (which would not fit on the 8+4 EPS) is required. :)
 

LBomb

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Thank you both @EarthDog and @IceShroom . Do either of you have any recommendations for a quality PSU that has 4 pin connections as well? I'm thinking of future proofing myself a little because I suspect I'm going to get into tinkering. Maybe even reply to questions on forums one day.
 
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Benchmark Scores Faster than yours... I'd bet on it. :)
Thank you both @EarthDog and @IceShroom . Do either of you have any recommendations for a quality PSU that has 4 pin connections as well? I'm thinking of future proofing myself a little because I suspect I'm going to get into tinkering. Maybe even reply to questions on forums one day.
That isn't really future proofing as you dont need it. Do you plan on overclocking using dry ice or liquid nitrogen in the future? Making an investment on a pot, dewar, ln2/dry ice, etc?
 
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