So I have a weird issue, now I do not think it's the 5900x, it's 100% stable but you never know.
I have tried 2 boards from Asus, the B550m plus, and the X570 hero VIII, both have the same issue.
This issue is this, when ram occupy DIMM sockets 1/3 the boards will fail to post with ram set to DOHCP 3600 speeds ( or manually set as well even with voltage adjustments on SOC/ ram/ VRM line load ) it will run the ram at default JDEC speeds with no issue and completely stable.
When the RAM occupies DIMM sockets 2/4 it will run DOHCP 3600 speeds with no stability issues. I am thinking it's a bios issue, but I figured I will see what the community thinks.
Slots 2 & 4 (counting from cpu socket) are the standard 2 dimm setup.
hmm that is new to me, been building since 96 and built nearly every generation of hardware, 1/3 was always the go to. Weird how that changed, but then why would it be fine for the first gen Ryzen? What changed?
Read the motherboard manual.
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It is possible they moved the main DIMM Slots from 1 & 3 to 2 & 4 is due that DIMM Slot 1 is closest to the CPU and since many Air CPU Coolers are so large, many sometimes extends slight over the DIMM slot 1.
But then again that is just a guess. Maybe it was for technical reasons concerning the CPU and Mobo.
But I would think it should still boot up if you populate Dimm Slots 1 & 3 in Default settings without DOCP enabled.
I have an Asus Motherboard and when I used DOCP before a BIOS update it wouldn't boot up and BIOS would reset my RAM back to SPD speed. But if I did it manually in BIOS via a drop-down Menu with various RAM Speeds it works fine.
After updating my BIOS I was unable to locate DOCP . But it could be in a subset of BIOS settings.
NOTE: Forgot to mention, Is your RAM Memory listed in your Motherboard's QVL List for the 5000 series processor?
Each board manufacturer is different so look at your mb manual to know for sure. I came from an Intel build to this 5950x - x570 and I stuck them in the wrong slots at first.