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- Nov 23, 2020
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as I know it like all intel cpu last gen was support only 3200basic memory DDR4 and still work with 3600 and above that why I got profile xmpGigabyte 100% supports that memory kit because it is validated by them and on the QVL list. However, AMD does not.
Anything above DDR5-5200 for Ryzen 7000 series is considered a user overclock and not supported by AMD.
Max Memory Speed: 2x1R DDR5-5200
I understand there may be a language barrier here. The risk to the CPU comes from needing high IMC voltage to get it stable (or even booting). That will damage your CPU overtime. The motherboard QVL list is misleading. Not just Gigabyte here, all the vendors do it. All the list means, is someone in a lab validated it to work on that motherboard. This does not indicate voltage needed and its always validated with a ES CPU (engineering sample) that has a excellent IMC. I wish vendors would stop listing speeds that are unlikely to work for daily use and or us normals. Its been this way for years now. Not going to change anytime soon.
I will leave it here. IF you do not change anything, two things will happen. A corrupted OS and a dead CPU. There is evidence high SoC voltage is killing CPUs, I have no doubt you are at 1.35+ already from the motherboards auto settings.
I change memory xmp to 6000MHZ and change all bios setting to default and still have that issue, only when my xmp is off with default 4800mhz it work well.Trust the advice given above!
I encouraged a friend of mine to jump on the AM5 bandwagon and he picked up a 6400Mhz/32CL Kingston Renegade kit (we thought we got a great deal but far from it). It seemed to work fine until launching games resulted to constant restarts and BF2042 was stuttering like crazy before freezing up and on top sometimes the system wasn't posting after exiting BIOS. Tried a bunch of stuff but nothing worked for him until he dialed down/selected a lower freq preset to 5600Mhz which worked perfectly fine. We were supposed to run higher frequencies or presets and each time stress test, run games, etc.... but he had enough with the first round of tests and settled with 5600Mhz.
Whether its QVL supported or not, 6400Mhz doesn't seem to have been rigorously tested for some of these boards. Or we have to wander what tests were they running to determine seamless compatibility.
More importantly, there are new developments you should be aware of where BIOS settings are causing problems and burning chips up. The guys above are clearly warning you to avoid damaging your system (esp. CPU, mobo and memory). AMD has identified the problem (or some of the problems) and have issued a patch for board manufacturers to provide BIOS updates. Everyone on AM5 is encouraged to commit to these BIOS updates. Set everything on default, update your BIOS and settle with a less problematic memory profile (~6000mhz).
So the problem is motherboard?