Testing Method & Test Setup
To test the overclocking capabilities of the memory we are going to use Intel’s
recently released Haswell platform. As memory overclocks are known to vary between
different motherboards, we are going to perform the tests using two different
platforms to be sure that our numbers are reliable.
Motherboard |
ASUS Maximus VI Gene (BIOS 0607)
Gigabyte Z87X-OC (BIOS F4) |
CPU |
Intel Core i7-4770K ES @ 4.0 GHz |
Graphic
card |
ASUS GTX 580 |
Memory |
Kingston HyperX Beast KHX18C10T3K2/16X |
SSD |
Samsung PM840 Pro |
PSU |
Seasonic Platinum 660 Watts |
OS |
Windows 7, 64 bit SP1 |
Even though Haswell is very flexible on the memory frequency one can set, very few
people actually do base clock (BCLK) overclocking on their daily setups.
Therefore, instead of our previous procedure of fixing the voltage and raising
the frequency in 10MHz steps we are now going to fix the frequency and minimize
the voltage in 0.01V steps.
As usual, our stability method of choice is HCI Memtest.
Since we are dealing with a 16 GB kit, we use eight 1500 MB instances and call
things stable if we see all of them to go past 100% without showing a single
error.
Not to get things too complicated, we only set the primary timings, command rate
(1T) and the memory voltage by hand while the rest of the settings is left for
the motherboard and SPD to agree on.
Results
As typical for Hynix MFR-based memory, raising the voltage has the biggest affect on the CAS latency by allowing to run potentially lower values. The rest of the primary timings only react to voltage changes in borderline stability scenarios with the main parameter dictating lowest stable values being the memory frequency.
Comparing results to some of the MFR-based memory that we previously tested, first thing that springs into attention is the necessity to use relatively high tRP values on this particular kit. Ultimately, it translates into the inability of our review sample to operate at rated frequency of 933MHz using rated tRP 10, which is a major letdown.
On the plus side, the same kit had no issues to run as DDR3-2133 with 9-11-12-30 and DDR3-2400 with 11-12-13-32 at voltages acceptable for long-term use. We weren’t, however, able to crack the DDR3-2600 mark common for Hynix MFR but 40% overclocks are also not something to be expected out of every memory kit out there.
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