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970 Performance FX-9000 & RAM incompatibility

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    Posted: 17 Aug 2015 at 7:02am
Hello!
 
I'm used to the FX-9000 series and use Noctua NH-D14/15 coolers without problems on Sabertooth 990FX R2.0 motherboards. I always use AMD Radeon RAM 2133 and 2400(@2133 AMP profile, CMD 1T).
 
Sadly I have two problems with my 970 Performance board.
First, at default(!) settings the FX-9590 straines the board so hard that mine began to burn! I have a picture of the chip (not uploaded until needed) which sits between the ATX12V plug and the screw of the CPU socket, which got so hot that the system shut down and damaged the CPU as well. To make it clear, CPU cooling itself was flawlessly applied and the CPU never reached 60° under any circumstances!
Second, AMD Radeon RAM seems to have a compatibility issue although the RAM controller is inside the CPU, works on the Sabertooth, and is listed in the QVL.
 
The history:
 
I bought the 970 Performance in March. After some time it got more and more unstable. Fist just freezes at idle and sometimes at GTA V and Dota 2. Then sudden bluescreens and even more often game crashes. Then, in July, it shutted off and no way to turn it on again (cut power for some time, etc.).
Then I've discovered a burned chip besides the CPU! I switched it through RMA / the store where I bought it. Then, after receiving a new board (it states Made in Vietnam now instead of China, strange), I discovered that the CPU has been damaged as well (just running fans without getting a POST screen or any further reaction) and returned that one too.
 
After RMA:
 
I have updated to the latest BIOS, even though it states just M2 compatibility improvement. Then I have looked deeper into the BIOS settings and found that the "CPU Voltage Offset" was at "+50mV" by default! This is insane and useless while using a FX-9590 which has already a very high voltage to reach 5 GHz turbo! I'm not going to overclock it and now I find a power wasting setting and maybe the reason why my first board began to burn.
 
To check the uselessness I have used prime95 for a short period of time and HWmonitor to see what temperature the VRM gets. Besides the hopelessly overstrained heatsink even at default settings, here are the results:
 
+0mV (manual): VRM 85-90° | CPU ~55°
+50mV (default): 90-95° | CPU <=60°
+100mV (manual): >100° (would have gone beyond that if not interrupted at that point) | CPU >60°
+150mV (not tested...)
 
At +50mV and reaching 90-95° VRM for some seconds, the board begins to make noise around the VRM, like sizzeling! It stops doing that after quitting prime95. At +0mV this never happend and there were no stability issues at prime or Windows itself. So why set +50mV by default?!
 
This board is obviously wrong configured and not suitable to be used with a FX-9000 processor in my opinion! Mind that my Define R4 case is open on both sides - all case fans running though - I can imagine what happend inside the closed case.
 
The RAM incompatiblity is the next thing. QVL states, it is supported (CPU and RAM both AMD brand anyway) and it works on a Sabertooth that does not have it on QVL...
The system is only stable when I set fully Auto without AMP and that results in 800 MHz... if I set 1866 or 2133 MHz, prime is not stable for longer than some minutes. Switching to the black slots instead of the red ones, didn't help.
Further, SPD readout inside the BIOS is wrong for some values (tRFC 1 instead of ~300).
 
So what I am going to do? I am not willing to experiment with undervolting to get a trustworthy system and buy some other RAM kits that might work!? My store would hardly let me switch to a Sabertooth instead and return it in used condition...
 
Any help is appreciated, hopefully a BIOS update that fixes these issues!


Edited by WKjun - 19 Jan 2016 at 7:00pm
PC1: FX-9590@def|290 |16GB@2133|Sabertooth 990FX R2.0
PC2: FX-8320@4.5|290 |16GB@2133| "
PC3: FX-9590@def|280X|16GB@2133| "
PC4: FX-9370@def|280X|16GB@2133| "
PC5: FX-6300@4.6|7950|16GB@1866|990FX-UD3
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote parsec Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 17 Aug 2015 at 2:28pm
Originally posted by WKjun WKjun wrote:

Hello!
 
I'm used to the FX-9000 series and use Noctua NH-D14/15 coolers without problems on Sabertooth 990FX R2.0 motherboards. I always use AMD Radeon RAM 2133 and 2400(@2133 AMP profile, CMD 1T).
 
Sadly I have two problems with my 970 Performance board.
First, at default(!) settings the FX-9590 straines the board so hard that mine began to burn! I have a picture of the chip (not uploaded until needed) which sits between the ATX12V plug and the screw of the CPU socket, which got so hot that the system shut down and damaged the CPU as well. To make it clear, CPU cooling itself was flawlessly applied and the CPU never reached 60° under any circumstances!
Second, AMD Radeon RAM seems to have a compatibility issue although the RAM controller is inside the CPU, works on the Sabertooth, and is listed in the QVL.
 
The history:
 
I bought the 970 Performance in March. After some time it got more and more unstable. Fist just freezes at idle and sometimes at GTA V and Dota 2. Then sudden bluescreens and even more often game crashes. Then, in July, it shutted off and no way to turn it on again (cut power for some time, etc.).
Then I've discovered a burned chip besides the CPU! I switched it through RMA / the store where I bought it. Then, after receiving a new board (it states Made in Vietnam now instead of China, strange), I discovered that the CPU has been damaged as well (just running fans without getting a POST screen or any further reaction) and returned that one too.
 
After RMA:
 
I have updated to the latest BIOS, even though it states just M2 compatibility improvement. Then I have looked deeper into the BIOS settings and found that the "CPU Voltage Offset" was at "+50mV" by default! This is insane and useless while using a FX-9590 which has already a very high voltage to reach 5 GHz turbo! I'm not going to overclock it and now I find a power wasting setting and maybe the reason why my first board began to burn.
 
To check the uselessness I have used prime95 for a short period of time and HWmonitor to see what temperature the VRM gets. Besides the hopelessly overstrained heatsink even at default settings, here are the results:
 
+0mV (manual): VRM 85-90° | CPU ~55°
+50mV (default): 90-95° | CPU <=60°
+100mV (manual): >100° (would have gone beyond that if not interrupted at that point) | CPU >60°
+150mV (not tested...)
 
At +50mV and reaching 90-95° VRM for some seconds, the board begins to make noise around the VRM, like sizzeling! It stops doing that after quitting prime95. At +0mV this never happend and there were no stability issues at prime or Windows itself. So why set +50mV by default?!
 
This board is obviously wrong configured and not suitable to be used with a FX-9000 processor in my opinion! Mind that my Define R4 case is open on both sides - all case fans running though - I can imagine what happend inside the closed case.
 
The RAM incompatiblity is the next thing. QVL states, it is supported (CPU and RAM both AMD brand anyway) and it works on a Sabertooth that does not have it on QVL...
The system is only stable when I set fully Auto without AMP and that results in 800 MHz... if I set 1866 or 2133 MHz, prime is not stable for longer than some minutes. Switching to the black slots instead of the red ones, didn't help.
Further, SPD readout inside the BIOS is wrong for some values (tRFC 1 instead of ~300).
 
So what I am going to do? I am not willing to experiment with undervolting to get a trustworthy system and buy some other RAM kits that might work!? My store would hardly let me switch to a Sabertooth instead and return it in used condition...
 
Any help is appreciated, hopefully a BIOS update that fixes these issues!



If you look at the CPU Support list for the 970 Performance, you'll see this warning for all of the FX-8000 and FX-9000 series processors:

For cooling the CPU and its surrounding components, please install a CPU cooler with a top-down blowing design.

That means a CPU cooler that has a fan pushing air down onto the board, so air flows over the VRM heat sink and VRMs. A Noctua CPU cooler of that type is this model:

http://www.noctua.at/inc/imageviewer.php?item=111&pnr=0

Your Noctua cooler is a great CPU cooler, I use one myself, but it is not a "top-down blowing" design. It would be very hard to find a top-down blowing type CPU cooler that cooled a CPU as good as your Noctua NH-D14/15 does.

You know what the problem is, over heating of the VRM chips. Also, the use of an eight phase VRM design must have extra good cooling of the VRM heat sink to control any over heating. A 12 phase VRM design will operate cooler than an eight phase design, but still needs air moving across the VRM heat sink when using FX-9000 series processors. The sizzling you heard was probably the heat sink pad used between the VRM chips and the heat sink, or the thermal paste if that was used.

Your board and almost every AMD board needs CPU VRM cooling when using a FX-9000 series CPU. Randomly mounted case fans are generally not enough. The top, rear fan mounting location found on most PC cases should have a fan blowing air into the PC case, close to the VRMs. The case must have fans on the top pulling air out of the case. Somehow mounting a fan to push air over the VRM heat sink is required IMO. Video cards that exhaust air into the PC case will make cooling the VRMs and the CPU more difficult.

About the CPU Voltage Offset of 50mv, was that using a built in CPU over clock option, or just the default BIOS settings for the FX-9590? Either way, that CPU Voltage Offset might have been chosen so any and all FX-9590 processors would be able to work at 5GHz, since all processors are not the same.

About the RAM compatibility situation, the Memory Support list for your board has this warning:

When overclocking, some AMD CPU models may not support DDR3 1600 MHz or higher frequency DIMMs.

Did the Sabertooth board run your memory above 1600?

One thing I think we should remember (admit?) is the FX-9000 series processors need more power from a mother board to run at 5GHz than anyone realized. I think mother board manufactures were surprised by this, and discovered that some of their boards they thought would work fine with the FX-9000 series processors, were not good enough to supply to them all the power they need. I've heard that some AMD boards are getting BIOS updates that won't let them boot if an FX-9000 series processor is used in the board!

That is how bad the situation is with these processors has become. AMD's "most everything is compatible" designs have reached a hard limit with FX-9000 series processors, and for some low end board, that includes the FX-8000 series processors too IMO.

I don't know if your board will get a BIOS update to fix the issues you had with the memory, or to change the default CPU Voltage Offset default value.



Edited by parsec - 06 Oct 2015 at 11:32am
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote WKjun Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 17 Aug 2015 at 7:05pm
Hello & thanks in advance that your participation!
 
I admit the Noctua NH-D14/15 ist not a top-down cooler per se. But its unique design combines the advantages of both, top-down and tower coolers. As you know, the middle fan's protrusion offers "Excellent component cooling" Wink:
Therefore I think and have the experience that this model cools the CPU and surrounding components better than any other air cooler. Which air cooler would suffice, if not this one? My Define case is not that small either and I have no problems running six other FX-CPUs even overclocked stable.
 
At this point I have to say that if the VRM design and its cooling solution is that tenuous, ASRock should never have approved FX-9000 support! Even 125W chips in that list have the top-blow warning, how could it handle 220W? Even as an aware consumer I find it infeasible to let me try and find out ways to have a durable system without blowing something out - on my other board it works that way, plug & play. Furthermore the hand picked FX-9000 models are able to operate at reasonable voltage levels and might not even use up the 220W TDP margin. Overclocking a FX-8000 (to that level) would lead to much more heat and power needs. Even if these chips have been underestimated power-wise, two years after its release, mainboard manufacturers have to be aware of that! I would have admitted that for models available back then, but not for a 2015 release!
 
The voltage offset is by default +50mV! And there is definetly no reason to overvolt the CPU additionally by a mainboard manufacturer to reach 4.7 GHz base clock and 5 GHz turbo clock. Turbo works automatically (on just one core), as you might know, if certain conditions apply and APM (Application Power Management) looks after that. So no (CPU) overheating could occure, if the chip is fully loaded or too hot. By raising voltages (and temperature) it would even hinder reaching turbo and any CPU has the right voltage information built-in!
 
The Sabertooth has a better, cooler running VRM design and a better cooling solution mounted (same config leads to <75° for the VRMs). But importantly its BIOS has more options, like Phase Change for VRM - an extreme setting for OC - where a warning is visible to actively cool the VRMs at non-default(!) settings and such an option is missing in the 970 P. BIOS. Maybe this setting is misplaced for the FX-9590 without knowledge about its function and creates unnecessary heat and strain?!
 
About the RAM speed I can tell you this:
 
The FX-9590 is not overclocked in a common sense. OC is something a user would apply. 1866 MHz is officially supported by AMD on any of these CPUs, as long as you have 2 modules. 4 modules *could* lead to instability at full speed, so 1600 MHz is advisable. I just use 2 modules and the same modules work at 2133 MHz on my Sabertooth. And even 4 modules work at 2133 MHz there...


Edited by WKjun - 17 Aug 2015 at 8:05pm
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote WKjun Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 20 Aug 2015 at 5:12pm
Yesterday I've tried another RAM kit:
 
Crucial Ballistix DDR3-1866 (2x8GB) with XMP. Independet of activating the XMP profile, it just works at 1333 MHz or below. If I select 1600 or above, the system hangs with a black screen. I have to turn it off and on again, wait some time until the BIOS recovers with default settings.
 
This is annoying, because both, the AMD Radeon and Crucial Ballistix Kits, run flawlessly on my Sabertooth boards. And why shouldn't it work, the memory controller sits within the CPU!
 
I could live with the boisterous voltage settings and undervolt the system, but buying another RAM kit is out of the question.
 
What could I have done wrong? Should I open an official support ticket?
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote Xaltar Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 20 Aug 2015 at 11:51pm
What voltage are the RAM kits rated for? It could be they are 1.65v kits and are only able to run at 1333 at the default 1.5v the board uses. If they are 1.65v kits then you will have to either set RAM voltage to auto or manually set it to 1.6 or 1.65 depending on their rating.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote parsec Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21 Aug 2015 at 12:12am
I don't know exactly why your memory will not run above 1333 on the ASRock board, except for the warning in the Memory Support list:

When overclocking, some AMD CPU models may not support DDR3 1600 MHz or higher frequency DIMMs.

Yes I know you said your memory worked on the SaberTooth board. There are BIOS settings that are not available to users that might be making the difference. Were the memory controller voltages the same as the SaberTooth on the 970 Performance? Or memory voltage?

The VRM option on the SaberTooth is an Asus only option, not a standard option that is common to all AMD 970 boards.

I use a Noctua DH-14 socket 2011 version, and it's not that great for VRM cooling.

Different boards are... different. So is their price.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote WKjun Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 21 Aug 2015 at 4:54pm
Hello!
 
This Crucial kit is rated for 1.5V at 1866 MHz (while the AMD kit needs 1.65V for 2133/2400 MHz) and runs at that setting on the other mainboard.
 
Your words, parsec, about the memory controller's voltage gives me the idea of a possibly wrong voltage setting for the CPU-NB! If it hasn't enough juice it would react like this. I'm going to check this out soon!
 
Thanks for your input! Approve
 
PS: Which top-blowing cooler would ASRock (or you) recommend?
Have you relocated the fan in the middle of your NH-D14 as near as possible down to the socket? In theory this would hinder airflow between the backside fan and middle fan to a small degree (never benched it) but it gives the VRM a better airflow from downside.
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote WKjun Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 24 Aug 2015 at 5:43pm
I was mislead (again) by several factors:
 
.) DIMM slots' channel linkage seems to be the other way round than usual
.) Switching "Overclock Mode" from Auto to Manual kills RAM auto detection and stability at high frequencies
.) System is unstable in Turbo mode
 
This is what happended:
 
I've switched back to the original two 8GB Radeon DDR3-2400 modules. BIOS is at default values (C6 setting is Disabled, therefore Turbo inactive!). RAM is automatically set to 1866 MHz (CL13) and 1.65V.
 
If I select XMP, it runs at 2400 MHz (11-12-12) - not benched, but POST is alright
If I select AMP it runs at 2133 MHz (11-12-12; some sub-timings a bit faster) - Prime-stable
If I select AMP and tweak timings to 10-11-11 (taken over from the 2133 MHz Kit) - Prime-stable too!
 
Another strange thing is the DIMM slot linkage and "corresponing" Command Rate timing. Usually channel A (red slots, nearer to CPU) should be filled first, prior channel B (black slots). If channel B is filled first, it reacts like 4 filled slots, which usually leads to a bit slower Command Rate of 2T.
In my case, when using channel A, the Command Rate was 2T automatically and no POST if 1T was selected manually. In the black slots, which are supposed to be channel B, 1T was set automatically and works stably!
 
So far so good!
 
The next phenomenon is the "Overclock Mode". If I change it from Auto to Manual (leaving reference clock at 200), RAM is automatically set to 800 MHz and values above 1600 MHz are unstable or not bootable, as described initially. So I have to leave it at Auto. Although it is not my intention to OC this system, it degrades future possibilities.
 
[EDIT]
With +50mV Offset (default value) Prime SEEMS to run for a longer time, but freezes in the end (10 min. or so). I'm going to try more Vcore instead/additionally to Offset Voltage now...
 
[EDIT 2]
It's no use. Even if I use +100mV Offset as well as 1.525V Vcore instead of 1.500V it keeps freezing. Then I've tried to reset BIOS to defaults and just activate C6 (& Turbo). No difference. RAM was at 1866 MHz. I didn't bother to try 800 MHz...
So voltage is not the issue as previously suspected. Without Turbo (& C6) and +0mV Offset, Prime ran 7 house continously.
 


Edited by WKjun - 25 Aug 2015 at 6:13pm
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote WKjun Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 28 Sep 2015 at 8:52pm
I've reported the issues (seperated into two cases) to ASRock (http://event.asrock.com/tsd.asp - German language) three weeks ago! No reaction, except for two confirmation mails! How long does it usually take?! Or is (German) support non-existent? Angry

Edited by WKjun - 28 Sep 2015 at 8:54pm
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Post Options Post Options   Thanks (0) Thanks(0)   Quote WKjun Quote  Post ReplyReply Direct Link To This Post Posted: 07 Jan 2016 at 7:57pm
To close this matter unsuccessful:
 
ASRock actually did answer to one of my tickets some weeks after my last post here, offering me to send it in, but by then my goal was to get rid of it.
So I've returned the mainboard to my retailer for the second time. Waiting about 7 weeks for a decision of its wholesaler, I've got my money back.


Edited by WKjun - 15 Jan 2016 at 10:23pm
PC1: FX-9590@def|290 |16GB@2133|Sabertooth 990FX R2.0
PC2: FX-8320@4.5|290 |16GB@2133| "
PC3: FX-9590@def|280X|16GB@2133| "
PC4: FX-9370@def|280X|16GB@2133| "
PC5: FX-6300@4.6|7950|16GB@1866|990FX-UD3
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