before play with the timing, I will do as Southtribunal said and boot with only one, install windows, flash the BIOS , it may fix your problem. you can also download the bios and do it on a USB stick.
It is very possible. Put one stick in and manually set the RAM and see what happens.
ST
before play with the timing, I will do as Southtribunal said and boot with only one, install windows, flash the BIOS , it may fix your problem. you can also download the bios and do it on a USB stick.
.....
Also, does it really mean i would face no problem or have to config the RAM settings if i follow the list(linked below) of "Guaranteed-Compatible Memory for your Asus Crosshair III Formula"
Don't run the sticks under Auto settings, especially with over 4Gbs installed. Set the BIOS to the volts and timings of the ram manufacturer's settings.
some boards don't like certain ram sticks. I can assess to that. And you can't do anything against it except replace either.
this will help for sure, your memory are not even recomended my corsair for that board, if I don't mistake you have not purchase yet those memory, or at least they are still at the computer shop, ask them to give you memory from the list of corsair.
With AI Overclock on [Manual], set the DRAM Frequency to 1600Mhz, and the DRAM Voltage to 1.65V. Then go into DRAM Timing/Driving Config, set DRAM Command Rate to 2T and TCL-TRCD-TRP-TRAS to 9-9-9-24. These are the recommended settings from Corsair's web site. Now hit F10 to save settings and reboot. The system should now boot successfully.
it's not OC, it's just adjusting the ram to the manufacturer specs
xentr_legal_notice_description