TheOverclocker Issue 46 | Page 36

G A M E T I M E // D R A M P E R F O R M A N C E T U N I N G ASROCK Z390 PHANTOM ITX/AC & G.SKILL F4 TRIDENT Z F4-3200 C14 E very once in a while I test DRAM frequency scaling and application performance. Mostly for review purposes, but I recently had to do this when replacing a faulty motherboard. During that process I decided to measure the DRAM performance as it impacts games, video encoding and of course overclocking benchmarks. For the most part or at least in many reviews. What happens is that when performance scaling is done, secondary and tertiary timings are 34 The OverClocker Issue 46 | 2019 ignored. There’s no issue with that for the purposes of a review. That said, be aware that these timings change dynamically with the DRAM strap and whatever auto configuration rules the board vendor has programmed. There will be variation of course between motherboards, but regardless of what motherboard you have, tuning these can often give you a better performance boost than just tuning the primary timings. To that end, I set about trying to measure the difference between AUTO rules and hand tuning the memory. For that I solicited the help of one fine ASRock Z390 Phantom Gaming ITX/ AC motherboard and a G.SKILL Trident Z DDR4 3200 C14 set of memory. I had little to no expectations from this motherboard, but it turned out to not only be speedy but simple to overclock with. As with most two DIMM boards, it’s particularly adept at DRAM overclocking. Aside from this, it’s the clean FHD UEFI, quick recovery and