Main PC: AMD Ryzen 9 5900X - EK AIO 360 D-RGB - Arctic Cooling MX-4 - Asus Prime X570-P - 4x8GB DDR4 3200 HyperX Fury CL16 - Sapphire Pulse Radeon RX 5700XT - 1TB Kingston Fury Renegade - 1TB ADATA SX 6000pro - 512GB ADATA SU800 - 1TB Seagate Momentus 5400rpm 2.5" - SAMA Armor Gold 750W - custom black ATX and EPS cables - Fractal Design Define R5 Blackout - Windows - 3 Arctic Cooling P14 PWM PST - 2 Arctic Cooling P12 PWM PST.Your system is performing better than expected because of good PBO settings or the like, not the RAM Plus since prices have risen on them a lot, they're not even that particularly good a value either. Ballistix are usually a pretty good value if you want to overclock, but good value != best. It's very much more likely that it's either a terrible motherboard causing the CPU to power throttle or PBO just isn't on.Īlso, as has been told before, ballistix aren't the best RAM on Ryzen, that has been and will continue to be a tuned kit of B die based memory. Yeah fast memory helps and all, and it can just be that the FCLK is set too high (say running a 4000MT/s kit with 2000MHz FCLK) since that can cause performance regressions, but I would highly doubt memory is the issue in this case. With RAM at JEDEC (2133 auto settings, still dual rank though since I didn't feel like swapping kits) it does 22851. With tuned B die (dual rank 3800MT/s 14-13-13-21 1T GDM enabled fully tuned subtimings) on my system (5900x, locked to 4.5GHz for all tests for consistency sake) it output 22912. My 5900X and 3060ti, with 2x16 Crucial Ballistix DDR4-3200 CL16, on a B550, score better than expected on CB R23, with standard DOCP 2666-3200 OC, voltage and timings.Ĭinebench in particular is known for not caring a bit about what memory speeds you're running though. Ryzens seem to work best with Crucial Balistix. It doesn't pay to skimp on your components, and this is just one reason why. Also, I personally would not run a 5000-series on a B450, and you are practically begging that 3060 to burn up on that PSU. It could be a combination of all three, board, RAM, and PBO being off. I've seen a pattern of Ryzens not liking Corsair RAM of late. That said, board and PBO aside (and these are rather valid possibilities), your RAM could be an issue. It's like the Hansel and Gretel story, "Nibble, nibble, little mouse, who's been nibbling at my house?" Which is to say a slight performance degrade with this component and another slight performance degrade with another component can collectively impact performance quite severely. When it comes to performance benchmarks, performance degrades from slight misfires with multiple components tend to snowball. Other Misc Devices: 2012 MacBook Pro 13" running Linux Mint 21.1 - Mac Pro 1,1 (2x dual cores as I haven't swapped the quads in yet, 32GB DDR2 and a 512MB HD4870) running El Cap/Lion/sometimes other Mac OS X versions - iPod Video (5th gen) Mobile/Work Devices: Late 2014 iMac 5K (work computer) - iPhone 13 Pro Max - Apple Watch S3 Rest of the HEDT collection - Xeon X5675/EVGA X58 Classified 4-Way SLI - i7 4930K/EVGA X79 Dark Smol Rig - i7 6950X - Noctua NH-L12S - EVGA X99 Micro 2 - 4x4GB 2800MHz DDR4 - Radeon PRO WX2100 - 250GB 960 Evo + hotswap 2.5" bay + LG WH14NS40 ODD - SilverStone SST-TX300 - Dell Inspiron 530S Chassis - Linux Mint 21.1 Main PC - i9 7980XE - EKWB Quantum-something block - EVGA X299 Dark - 4x8GB HyperX Predator DDR4 - Intel ARC A770 LE - 1TB 970 Evo + 500GB XPG Atom30 + 2x 1TB MX500 - EVGA 1600W T2 - Corsair 750D Airflow - CPU-only custom loop w/360 slim rad + 280mm thick (60mm) rad & Noctua Redux NF-P12/P14s fans - Windows 11 Intel HEDT and Server platform enthusiasts: Intel HEDT Xeon/i7 Megathread
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