I played a 40 minute session of Fortnite before and then a 20-30 minute session after enabling DOCP ... but with 2 DIMMS. And no WHEA crashes or anything.
I never got to the step of manually adjusting voltages in BIOS, if it does end up crashing I will ofcourse get to that point.
I don't want to jump to conclusions but it does start to look like it was a bad PSU issue.
Now I don't want to stop troubleshooting and testing, I'd appreciate if people stuck around and push me to further optimize this setup, even if very preliminary results show WHEAs don't seem to happen (as quickly as they did before*).
I don't necessairly have to run with it most of the time, but when I'm rendering/processing or playing something where I'd want to get more kick for a few hours.
I'm just not all that familiar with these modern OC options as much yet, I'd probably will go watch some basics around uncore components and memory, I'm a bit lost on details how these relationships work, besides, I didn't have an AMD CPU/Motherboard since 2008.
Glancing at some of the information I found, I see that VSOC adjustment could help with stability when pushing memory frequencies, ... but I'll get back more into it in a day or two when time allows.
BTW: Excuse me on some of my attitude, didn't want to charge out like that to say bad things about those memtests earlier, I got a lot of things going on.
However, the multiple-instance approach, while the author says it's even better because it would saturate CPU threads, some of the HCI memtest instances were disproportionately disadvantaged, only managing to barely hit 100% coverage while others (which started ealier) were at 300-400%
Is the 1.075V VSOC just natural droop from 1.1V set in BIOS?
1.1 VSOC should be more than adequate with just 2x32GB at 3600. Not too much else to say, settings look okay.
There's a slight difference in reported powers and temperatures under BIOS and Windows, but I haven't focused on comparing most of them yet as it's to be expected, althought some of them probably shouldn't drop.
I was focusing on drop for the PSU voltages in the meantime, and they were rock stable whether under max load or not, same as reported in BIOS.
Now I did so after you reminded me now:
Configuration:
BIOS VDDCR CPU = 1.408 Auto
BIOS VDDCR SOC = 1.100 Auto
BIOS DRAM = 1.350 DOCP
1.0V SB = 1.0 Auto
1.2V SB = 1.2 Auto
CPU 1.8V = 1.8 Auto
BIOS VTTDR = 0.675 Auto
VPP_MEM = 2.500 Auto
VDDP Standby = 0.900 Auto
I forgot to check the sensor monitoring in BIOS for the above configurations, before I started a traditional Memtest86+ v7, correction, I have the opensource one, not the Passmark one.
I'll post them later once the 128GB DOCP 3600MT Memtest soaks for a few hours, before I get back to other tests.