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Old Feb 5, 2007, 02:52 PM   #1
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??? A few questions about Corsair RAM

I have acquired the "CMX1024-3200C2PRO" Corsair RAM which is designed to work at timings of 2-3-3-6 @ 2.75V.

The default timings that my Motherboard set was 3-3-3-8 @ 2.6V which is correct to ensure that this RAM works on all Motherboards so I manually dropped the timings to 2-3-3-6 @ 2.7V and it works absolutely fine.

My Issue is that when i apply a voltage setting in my motherboard, it is always 0.05V lower than it should be e.g. 2.75V=2.7V Weirdly enough the next higher voltage which should be 2.8V is missing and so the next setting is 2.85V which is the MAX and would cause my RAM to operate at 2.8V.

All i want to know is will my RAM operate more stable at a slightly higher voltage rather than a slightly lower voltage AND will I damage the RAM by operating it at a higher voltage?

Thanks, Nick.
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Old Feb 5, 2007, 03:02 PM   #2
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If your RAM is running 2-3-3-6 at 2.7V, and you are not getting stability issues and aren't planning on OCing more than that, why would you want to increase your voltage?
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Old Feb 5, 2007, 06:34 PM   #3
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Im_Gumby View Post
If your RAM is running 2-3-3-6 at 2.7V, and you are not getting stability issues and aren't planning on OCing more than that, why would you want to increase your voltage?
Yes i do plan on overclocking from 200MHz to about 220MHz maybe even 240MHz depending on what the FSB is saying. Probably 220MHz as my P4 isn't a great overclocker.
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Old Feb 6, 2007, 02:18 AM   #4
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System Specs

you want to have the lowest possible voltage, and still to have it stable. You could download memtest, which will stresstest the memory. Try to get the ram as high as possible on the 2.6 or 2.7V, and if they fail, you could always add a little more juice..
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Old Feb 6, 2007, 07:43 AM   #5
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Also, have you flashed the BIOS to the latest rev? Perhaps they have new voltage settings available.
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Old Feb 6, 2007, 01:28 PM   #6
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System Specs

i had that ram before i got my corsair xms xl. it ran fine at 2-3-3-6 @ 2.6v for the longest time. I don't see why you'rs couldn't do the same thing.
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