ground Posted June 7, 2019 Posted June 7, 2019 On 5/2/2019 at 3:19 PM, ground1556 said: - 2200 7-7-6 seems to be close to impossible on non Corsair sticks. Not sure if they binned differently or if its the pcb. Triple kits seemed to do better this seems to be disproven. I've gotten a kit of Adata XPG+ 2200c8 that easily does 2220 7-7-6 on high ambient (note: my Dom GT testing was on lower ambient). They also skyrocket at 7-8-6 compared to the Dom GTs (2325 vs 2400+, oddly enough higher then I've managed with any other DR sticks on this particular IMC (tested BFR, CFR, Rev G, BDBG, BBSE, BDSE). Sounds like me and the others I've been talking to just had bad luck. 1 Quote
ground Posted July 21, 2019 Posted July 21, 2019 http://i4memory.com/showthread.php?t=22963 Was looking for something else but this some cold testing of GTX2 fits here  1 Quote
ground Posted September 25, 2019 Posted September 25, 2019 Is there a good guide to reflash the SPD on Hypers? I'm not sure if its the issue but before writing them off I would rather try it before throwing them out. I have a kit of 1866c7 2GB Hypers that were at first misbehaving (only being recognised as half capacity - 1 stick booted up was being recognised as 1GB, 2 sticks as 2GB) and then stopped working completely while a buddy of mine has a pair of GTX2s that went from working perfectly fine to not working at all. How to reflash SPD without messing them up? I've tried with Rweverything manually copying over from a working stick but that didn't work, now I have no idea what else could work - at least I couldn't get SPDtool to work yet / couldn't figure out how exactly it works... Quote
TerraRaptor Posted September 25, 2019 Posted September 25, 2019 There should be no difference if sticks are hypers or not. Normally, if using X48, you just read spd of one stick and write it to the other. I has an issue recently when hypers flashed to GTX2 were not posting on CVF with any cpu but flashing them to Dom 1866 C9 2.2 fixed the issue completely (but I was using the cracked version of taiphoon burner). Quote
Noxinite Posted September 25, 2019 Posted September 25, 2019 (edited) 46 minutes ago, ground1556 said: Is there a good guide to reflash the SPD on Hypers? I'm not sure if its the issue but before writing them off I would rather try it before throwing them out. I have a kit of 1866c7 2GB Hypers that were at first misbehaving (only being recognised as half capacity - 1 stick booted up was being recognised as 1GB, 2 sticks as 2GB) and then stopped working completely while a buddy of mine has a pair of GTX2s that went from working perfectly fine to not working at all. How to reflash SPD without messing them up? I've tried with Rweverything manually copying over from a working stick but that didn't work, now I have no idea what else could work - at least I couldn't get SPDtool to work yet / couldn't figure out how exactly it works... I was going to recommend rweverything as that's what I used in the past. Although your hypers might just be dying.. Edited September 25, 2019 by Noxinite Quote
ground Posted October 10, 2019 Posted October 10, 2019 On 3/15/2019 at 8:41 PM, ground1556 said: Oh, quick note too - if your sticks are dead/badly degraded the trick from d9 times of throwing them in the freezer over night or longer might work. Got 3 (out of 4, last remains unable to boot) 2000 c8 dimms that didn’t manage XMP, JEDEC boot or post at all before back to where they belong around 2000 7-7-6 at 1.66V. ...and if you put them in the freezer for a while remember it. I just spent half an hour searching my favorite kit turning my whole place upside down only to remember I had put them in the freezer a while back to recover a bit... 6 Quote
ground Posted July 11, 2020 Posted July 11, 2020 another thing of note - avoid mixing pcbs. the entire day yesterday I was fighting a kit of mine. First, these are the top 4 sticks out of ~20 sticks or so, they are from 3 different kits. I swapped everything (tried 2 boards, 2 PSUs, 6 CPUs, 3 OS), and it just made no sense at all. Each stick on its own is capable of 1100+ 7-7-6 32M. Booting 1100+ and running waza with any 3 of the 4 sticks is also easy. However, they do not pass 32M under any circumstances at 1050+ with decent timings. Turns out - corsair is using several different PCBs for their hyper based sticks. I have 2 50-00187A and 2 50-00218A in this kit. Looking back, the earliest sticks with the 50-00218A pcb I’ve seen are 10122374; I’ve also seen it on 10122507. 1 Quote
Obijuan83 Posted October 7, 2021 Posted October 7, 2021 (edited) My recent stick Dominator GT 2000C8 @ 2.04v / air Edited October 7, 2021 by Obijuan83 1 Quote
Obijuan83 Posted November 29, 2021 Posted November 29, 2021 (edited)  Corsair Dominator GT 2000c8 6-7-6-20-60-1T PL7 32M@2.0v  6-7-6-20-60-1T PL7 1M @ 2.1v Edited November 29, 2021 by Obijuan83 2 Quote
MaddMutt Posted April 22, 2022 Posted April 22, 2022 (edited) I know this may seem like a stupid question : I have a set of Dom GT 2000__ 8-8-8-24 v2.1 = IIRC hypers 1) Test the memory on a newer system - z87/97 with a 4770/90. This would show you what the memory is capable of - YES?? <- Take settings back to older system when benching?? 2) Test the memory on the system that you plan on benching - 1366/1155. This will show what the memory can do on this MB/IMC - YES?? <- The memory may be a potato on a 775/1155 but excellent on a 1150/2011?? Thank You For Your Time In Reading and Replying   Edited April 22, 2022 by MaddMutt Quote
Crew Leeghoofd Posted April 22, 2022 Crew Posted April 22, 2022 Sadly newer platforms, dont have their bios optimized for good old old hypers... You can better dial in and test them straight on x58 or am3+ 1 1 Quote
unityofsaints Posted July 22, 2023 Posted July 22, 2023 On 7/11/2020 at 8:59 PM, ground said: Turns out - corsair is using several different PCBs for their hyper based sticks. I have 2 50-00187A and 2 50-00218A in this kit. Where on the PCB is this printed? Quote
Noxinite Posted July 22, 2023 Posted July 22, 2023 27 minutes ago, unityofsaints said: Where on the PCB is this printed? Same as other sticks, right on the corner of the pcb. 1 Quote
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