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SafeDisk (AKA SoonHo Jeong) has tinkered with an AMD Ryzen 7 8700G APU and ASUS ROG Crosshair X670E GENE motherboard combination—earlier today, the professional overclocker set a validated/verified memory speed of DDR5-10600 world record on Team Red's AM5 platform. This has surpassed a previous result global-leading from late last week—DDR5-10346 was achieved with the same processor, but on a GIGABYTE B650E AORUS Tachyon board. SafeDisk has a distinct advantage in memory overclocking stakes, due to his workplace being the ASUS ROG labs in Taipei, Taiwan—his closest competitor, Benny Lodewijk Nitolo Lase (an Indonesian overclocker) now sits behind him in second place.
SafeDisk's test setup included the aforementioned APU plus motherboard combo, a Thermalright (not ASUS!) AIO, a twin pack of G.Skill Trident Z5 (F5-7800J3646H16G) DIMMs, and an ASUS GeForce GT 730 2 GB Silent graphics card. The ROG Crosshair X670E GENE's default set of VRM heatsinks were removed completely during test conditions. The two memory sticks were set at their default CL36 7800 MT/s speed at 1.45 V—SafeDisk's record breaking DDR5-10600 overclock was achieved with timings of 50-62-62-127-127. Wccftech noted that the: "overclock was able to boot directly into the OS and (SafeDisk) says that the whole OC procedure was very easy."
SafeDisk mentions that he did not implement any BCLK adjustments, and brought in some outboard gear—Wccftech clarified this situation: "(it's) important to mention here because apparently, there's a bug within the latest AGESA BIOS firmware that may show a higher DDR5 memory clock but in reality, that's not the case...This was confirmed by using an oscilloscope and adjusting the EX-clock (BCLK) within the BIOS settings. (This) didn't change the memory clock at all so that means that the test result achieved by the GIGABYTE B650E motherboard isn't the real deal whereas the one achieved by SafeDisk is the more factual result. This bug is seen in the AGESA 1.1.0.2b release which was released just a few weeks back and offers optimized support for AMD's Ryzen 8000G APU family."
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source
SafeDisk's test setup included the aforementioned APU plus motherboard combo, a Thermalright (not ASUS!) AIO, a twin pack of G.Skill Trident Z5 (F5-7800J3646H16G) DIMMs, and an ASUS GeForce GT 730 2 GB Silent graphics card. The ROG Crosshair X670E GENE's default set of VRM heatsinks were removed completely during test conditions. The two memory sticks were set at their default CL36 7800 MT/s speed at 1.45 V—SafeDisk's record breaking DDR5-10600 overclock was achieved with timings of 50-62-62-127-127. Wccftech noted that the: "overclock was able to boot directly into the OS and (SafeDisk) says that the whole OC procedure was very easy."
SafeDisk mentions that he did not implement any BCLK adjustments, and brought in some outboard gear—Wccftech clarified this situation: "(it's) important to mention here because apparently, there's a bug within the latest AGESA BIOS firmware that may show a higher DDR5 memory clock but in reality, that's not the case...This was confirmed by using an oscilloscope and adjusting the EX-clock (BCLK) within the BIOS settings. (This) didn't change the memory clock at all so that means that the test result achieved by the GIGABYTE B650E motherboard isn't the real deal whereas the one achieved by SafeDisk is the more factual result. This bug is seen in the AGESA 1.1.0.2b release which was released just a few weeks back and offers optimized support for AMD's Ryzen 8000G APU family."
View at TechPowerUp Main Site | Source