This is what mine looks like:Open cpuz again and click on the memory tab. What does the nb frequency section say or even the dram frequency box? As long as it says 800 or close to it for the NB and 1600 for dram then you are running at 3200mhz.
View attachment 9770
That means you are running 1066mhz. What options are available for the load xmp setting? Also dram frequency? Although it does say profile 1 is enabled. What bios revision is installed?
What's that mean?XMP Profile 2.0 will apply the speeds of the sticks, as well as timings and voltage.
Changed the to 2.1 Profile and nothing seemed changed.XMP values extend beyond that of the JEDEC specification, so you have to enable XMP to apply the profile values of the sticks to the system. Selecting XMP Profile 1 will do what you want and up the RAM to 3200, but it will also apply the correct voltage for those frequencies as well as the latency values (timing).
Anytime I click save change and exit, the machine would go on and off a few times before the screen lights up.yes, those are still at 2133. Did you have any boot issues when enabling XMP?
That's pretty standard when you make changes to the BIOS. Especially if it's memory related as it's likely retraining the memory. Is it doing that on every startup now?Anytime I click save change and exit, the machine would go on and off a few times before the screen lights up.