I download CPU-Z and GPU-Z to check if I get the specs I ordered. Very excited that it just arrived this morning. I ordered Ryzen 7 3700X + RTX 2080 Super + 16GB 2666MHz Ram +512GB SSD. However, before we get started, lets go over some of the common overclocking tools that can make overclocking and stress testing easier. CPU-Z gives you information such as processor name and vendor, core stepping and process, processor package, internal and external clocks, clock multiplier, partial overclock detection, and. Aurora R10, the RAM stats looks weird in CPU-Z. Windows reports only 16GB is useable, but has allocated for 32GB. Its running in single channel even though its 4 sticks 2. This is great for figuring out whether or not it’s still under warranty. In this guide, well go over how you can stress test your cpu, ram, and overall system (in a variety of situations). CPU-Z/Speccy says 32GB RAM, Windows says 16GB, 32GB is allocated This is something thats been boggling my mind for the past few days.
Also, if your RAM is giving you trouble, you can see its serial number and manufacturing date (week and year), as well as its maker.
Not a huge difference, but still, it’s good to know that the smaller DIMM is also making things slower. CPU: i7-2600K 4751MHz 1.44V (software) -> 1.47V at the back of the socket Motherboard: Asrock Z77 Extreme4 (BCLK: 103.3MHz) CPU Cooler: Noctua NH-D15 RAM: Adata XPG 2x8GB DDR3 (XMP: 2133MHz 10-11-11-30 CR2, custom.
BIOS and other software display data rate, while CPU-Z doesnt. The SPD tab also lists each DIMM’s max bandwidth, so now I know that my 512MB DIMM is slowing everything down because it’s 333MHz, while my 2GB one is capable of 400MHz. because DDR spits out data twice per cycle.
That’s handy, because now I know that the only practical upgrade for this machine would be getting another 1GB or 2GB stick, but it must be a single stick (not that I’m ever going to upgrade this old Toshiba workhorse, but still, it’s nice to know). Now I know that I have a 2GB DIMM module in one slot, and a 512MB DIMM in the other. For example, I remembered that once upon a time I upgraded this laptop’s RAM – but I wasn’t really sure how I went about it. What’s great about this tab is that it lets you see memory sizes on a per-slot basis. I am new to DFI mobo's, after trashing my POS ASRock 939Dual.