Got some conflicting info there, it says 2400mhz under information. Boot into windows and download CPU-Z and see what it says your memory is at, it should say 1200mhz or right around there.
Got some conflicting info there, it says 2400mhz under information. Boot into windows and download CPU-Z and see what it says your memory is at, it should say 1200mhz or right around there.
Got some conflicting info there, it says 2400mhz under information. Boot into windows and download CPU-Z and see what it says your memory is at, it should say 1200mhz or right around there.
+1
Many memory manufacturers using binning much like intel and amd do with CPU's. So the same ram chips in their ddr3 1333mhz are in their ddr3 2400mhz sticks. It's a question of what speeds, voltages and timings each chip can handle. Point being in bios sometimes ram speed is misidentified even with XMP profile. Your best bet is to check in windows as mentioned above using CPUz to see what your actually getting. It's also helps to set ram profiles manually rather then using something like XMP that uses a generic profile for your ram settings.