

I've not tried this on any ddr4 system as I don't want to risk it. I set the colour to change with the GPU temperature and I also set the small screen on the side of the Graphics card to display the temperature, vram, GPU usage etc via the RGB fusion 2.0 program, once I restarted my computer, it wouldn't boot up, not even to bios, I've narrowed it down to this program killing the ram, perhaps it's trying to write to the ram sticks bios or something, happened on three different sets of ram, at one point, I just went to uninstall the program but it also killed the set of rams in the machine that was used just to boot into windows. So I got myself a Gigabyte RTX 3090 master, installed it on my test bench, a Asus H81-Plus build, I installed gigabyte RGB fusion 2.0 program as suggested by Aorus engine. Hi I really need help confirming that it's not just my setup.

But there's something I'm missing from the very short story of this thread. She murdered him in the kitchen, on sept 14th, but can't figure out where the butler went. Obviously we are not sitting there with you, but I feel there's something missing here. Drop a stick and it could very well break. You should be able to build around that card with a 10700K do some overclocking and Run really nice 4K video (gaming, streaming. There's literally no reason that I could figure out to drop a 1000$ card into a rig that's worth than 150$ total. I wouldn't drop a 3090 into an H81 chipset board (50 bucks worth of omg, just don't do it) and then expect anything significant from it. Now the hardware side, and a little of my own opinion there. Well the reason is because the software uses resources.

Most of the time, software overclocking makes an unstable (prematurely) system over a bios overclock. Research software just like you do your hardware.ġstly, I don't use OC tools (software) for windows installations and tweaking (overclocking). Now KNOWING that software can brick hardware (any on any) from past to present, you all CAN enjoy the moment that it's entirely possible. Hopefully that settles some of the mis-com here in this thread. Strictly speaking no.Ĭan you write to memory and create profiles for your stick as a customization, YES you can indeed.

Well that works through the SPD chip everyone seems to back and forth on if it's a bios or not. The reason is there's an RGB controller on the memory for the lighting. To enlighten with useful information, rather than the usual banter, a simple google search with RGB software and issues is more common than people might think. I've been into PC hardware overclocking and PC modifications for many of years now.
