Yes. So far it has been running good with my setup and most likely will be the next official bios but it is beta at this point.This is a beta? I listed it. Maybe I should put a warning?
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Yes. So far it has been running good with my setup and most likely will be the next official bios but it is beta at this point.This is a beta? I listed it. Maybe I should put a warning?
Top JEDEC speed on DDR4 is 2400, but I have a feeling it might technically be 2667 like Ryzen's max (however for the record, the JEDEC DDR4 Registering Clock Driver document has specs for everything up to 3200, so it may technically now be 3200 *shrug*)What about it? Jedec max is 2133 for ddr4, so you're technically overclocked above that which is why it's an xmp(intel) or docp(amd) profile.
I had just been running on v1.5 up until tonight when I went back to 1.10 Shipping BIOS as I had gotten tired of the lack of DDR4-3200 stability. I could trick it into booting with a lot of effort, and it'd run just fine, would sleep fine, right up until a reboot... and then I'd go through 20mins of getting it to boot again. (And I'm just on 2x 8GB!)Just installed beta bios 1.61 for the MSI Titanium a few hours ago. It allows 4 dimm configurations to run at 2667 mhz, a bump up from the previous 2400mhz. Things are looking good. I expect at least 2933mhz for 4 dimms after the big mid-May bios updates from AMD.
Top JEDEC speed on DDR4 is 2400, but I have a feeling it might technically be 2667 like Ryzen's max (however for the record, the JEDEC DDR4 Registering Clock Driver document has specs for everything up to 3200, so it may technically now be 3200 *shrug*)
I had just been running on v1.5 up until tonight when I went back to 1.10 Shipping BIOS as I had gotten tired of the lack of DDR4-3200 stability. I could trick it into booting with a lot of effort, and it'd run just fine, would sleep fine, right up until a reboot... and then I'd go through 20mins of getting it to boot again. (And I'm just on 2x 8GB!)
I might have to try 1.61 though...Thanks for the heads up.
some times what you type makes no sense. So I will state this and maybe it will clear up whatever you were trying to convey to me.
The Superposition bench has little to no impact on the CPU so it would not likely show positive or negative results of a bios update.
Cinebench is a much better indicator of CPU performance and likely will show CPU increases as a result of a bios update if it does in fact increase CPU performance.
I have a CHVI and it worked wonderfully once I put the last bios on there. The current bios I think is the latest which I do not have. I may flash it. Not sure. I have to verify. I have a rock solid OC at 3.85 ghz 1700X and my system absolutely flies. Have 3200 ram running at 3200 round the clock. I just wished the Zen would clock throttle like Speedstep saving tons of electricty and heat.
As I posted in another thread, you need to be using PStates, and you'll get the throttling.
Followup to my previous MSI Titanium Beta v1.61 BIOS...
While the program AMIDEWIN does indeed 'fix' the DMI issues, that's unfortunately the only good news. 1.61 is still giving me hell when rebooting, as in, what settings run perfectly stable once initially applied... no longer function there-after. I literally can't seem to figure out what the deal is. Only difference NOW is that it makes it further into the diagnostic, hanging on D6 instead of instantly failing. But due to making it so far into the Pre-POST, it ends up needing a manual restart.
I dunno, it's crazy frustrating since after flashing and initially setting DDR4-3200, it works beautifully! Stable, no issues, wakes up from sleep no problem. It's only AFTER that first bootup where shit goes south and nothing works. :\ Doesn't matter if it's a successful shutdown, a restart, a crash... I'm not even sure if a fully cold boot would do the trick...
If there was an easy way (AGESA =/= MicroCode according to MMTool) to slip in the old AGESA, I'd do that in a heartbeat to see if that's the issue, but yea.... I've never worked with MMTool so it's a bit precarious for me to risk.
I guess back to v1.10 again with me... Which I love the fact it just works so well, but don't like the Sleep bug, since it screws with the fan temps. What a frustrating mess![]()
On the Crosshair you need to set the dram boot voltage higher to fix that. I am not sure your Titanium has that option or not. Once I set my dram boot voltage 1.4 my system posted fine, when before a cold boot would always screw up and hang in the post process. You would think setting voltage for the dram would mean set this voltage at all times, but I guess not. Hopefully your board has that setting as well.
Do you have a different boot voltage from normal dram voltage ?
For the ASUS CrossHair VI Hero, bios 1107 is now official:
http://dlcdnet.asus.com/pub/ASUS/mb/SocketAM4/CROSSHAIR-VI-HERO/CROSSHAIR-VI-HERO-ASUS-1107.zip
So far it is the best bios I've run on this board.
What have you done to get your memory and the platform to work better together? What memory do you have?They solved the cold boot problem in this way that it no longer fails to boot but it just puts the memory back to 2133, which is good but it requires another reboot to set it to 2933 then another to 3200. For me still have to find settings which bypass this.
My boot voltage is 1.395 and my normal dram voltage is at 1.365. At this point it would even make sense just to put the default speed before I switch off.
Gskill TridentZ F4 3200CL14D 16GTZWhat have you done to get your memory and the platform to work better together? What memory do you have?
XMP rated memory are rated/built to withstand 1.5v, I recommend you try 1.45v up to 1.5v. My Corsair memory on 2nd Ryzen rig which are also Hynix chips which might be the same as yours would not even boot to 2400 at 1.35v. Taking it up to 1.45v they go all the way up to rated speed of 3200 at 16-18-18-38(36 here is the rating but still working on that) and that is on a cheap Biostar motherboard. ASUS has taken DDR 4 modules up to 1.9v for testing. They are much more durable then most folks think. Hynix dims love voltage.Gskill TridentZ F4 3200CL14D 16GTZ
I have been cycling through voltages from 1.35 up to 1.38 normal voltage and boot voltage up to 1.4
It runs well but does not do cold boot.
I'm trying DOCP standard now.on the 1107 bios.
DRAM Boot Voltage is still buggy on Ryzen. Hopefully the next AGESA update will improve it. For example, on "Auto" it's meant to track the DRAM voltage, but it always defaults to 1.2V. Wouldn't surprise me if it isn't reliable when set manually, either. At least you C6H master race overlords have the option. Us Prime peasants have to live without that option (so always 1.2V boot voltage with no way to change it).
In the end the bios is unstable for certain configurations across the board means that the whole AM4 platform suffers. People with the same ram of different ram get mixed results if only there was more coherent function and that as you said will come with a few more bios upgrades. Even the one in May is prolly not the last that will improve things for DDR4 ram.
The only benefit C6H crowd has is more options , Taichi owners can run dual rank dimm , Before the end of the year I hope all of these problems are solved, sadly to late but you can't do anything about that.
New beta bios for Asus Crosshair VI. Minor bug fixes, may fix issues some people had with keyboard not working in UEFI.
Bios 1201
I can run at 3200 fine it is just cold boot problems , I would even dare to say it is a problem with the bios rather then the voltage used.
It makes little sense that I can run the same voltage and boot after I cleared everything with load optimized defaults.
I also have the CHVI with a kit of Gskill TridentZ 3600CL17D 16GTZ and it runs at XMP 3200 with no cold boot problems at all with 1107 where with the 1002 I couldn't even POST above 2133 without getting an F1 error. This BIOS dropped my CPU OC from 4075mhz to 4000 but thats OK with me for having much higher RAM speed. One thing I noticed right away was the SOC voltage defaulted to the "normal" AMD required 1.100V instead of 0.750V (and I'm not sure increasing it manually actually changed it on the old BIOS).
I think I need to check settings what is done by DOCP and manual , but there are a few values I change which I checked that DOCP standard does not do (boot voltage for one). I have severe problems with how flaky this works , booting fine all afternoon (with power on and off but not removed from the power socket) then in the evening same stuff happening again. failing to post. I have had successful operations at normal 1.35V (boot and normal bios 1002) up to as high as 1.385V normal and 1.4V boot.
I also have the CHVI with a kit of Gskill TridentZ 3600CL17D 16GTZ and it runs at XMP 3200 with no cold boot problems at all with 1107 where with the 1002 I couldn't even POST above 2133 without getting an F1 error. This BIOS dropped my CPU OC from 4075mhz to 4000 but thats OK with me for having much higher RAM speed. One thing I noticed right away was the SOC voltage defaulted to the "normal" AMD required 1.100V instead of 0.750V (and I'm not sure increasing it manually actually changed it on the old BIOS).
Try giving itan extra 50 ohms in the advanced dram settings in bios.
http://www.overclock.net/t/1624603/rog-crosshair-vi-overclocking-thread/14150#post_26080357The default value for bios 1107 is 53.3 ohm . you can lower it as well , what I saw from the video Noko posted is that Robert (AMD) is saying that you can move it from 40 to 80 , but I'm not to sure that he has a good idea on what he is talking about (does he mean for every ram kit or just the "high end" ones).
elmor said:Depends on your specific sticks/ICs, CPU, DIMMs per channel, single/dual rank. A few numbers that worked well for me:
Samsung B (SR) 2x8 = 53.3 ohms
Samsung B (DR) 2x16 = 80 ohms
Samsung B (DR) 4x16 = 43.6 ohms
Hynix A (DR) 2x8 = 53.3 ohms
Hynix A (DR) 4x8 = 40 ohms
http://www.overclock.net/t/1624603/rog-crosshair-vi-overclocking-thread/14150#post_26080357
Looks like experimentation, trial and error with good testing methods is what is needed. Next AGESA is going to be fun with a hell a lot of memory timings exposed. I am just in a weird position where my TridentZ will go up to 3500mhz at 1.35v without issue and a Hynix set does 3200mhz without issue at 1.45v - took all the fun out of it for me.