After updating the BIOS to AGESA 1.0.8.0, I did not get stability in my memories at 6400MHz or 6200MHz. After many tests I managed to manually stabilize it at 6000MHz, as shown in the photo. Unable to activate XMP profile with stability. I noticed that the electrical voltages for the Memory Controller are quite exaggerated as the DDR5 voltage rises to the point that the machine shuts down during stability tests, I had to manually intervene with this too.
It's important to note that I disabled the SoC overclocking option.
I came back with the version that is stable for me, AGESA 1.0.0.7a. I did not obtain stability with the new AGESA 1.0.8.0, on the contrary, regardless of my optimization attempts, the memories demonstrated instability at some point, therefore, artifacts appeared within the BIOS or corruption of the Windows 11 kernel.
the images below are from AGESA 1.0.0.7a. I note that there are settings in this version where certain parameters return to automatic mode, no matter how much I try to leave it as [enable].
In the performance tests that I was able to run with both versions, I observed that the old one is also the best performing in everything.
It's important to note that I disabled the SoC overclocking option.
cachememZenTimings_AGESA1.0.0.7aAI TWEAKER 02AI TWEAKER 03AMD CBSAMD CBS1AUDIO CONFIGURATIONCORE FLEX ALGORITHMDDR ADDRESSING OPTIONSDDR BUS CONFIGURATIONDDR MEMORY FEATURESvDDR MEMORY MBISTDDR POWER OPTIONSDDR SECURITYDDR TIMING CONTROL 01DDR TIMING CONTROL 02DDR TIMING CONTROL 03DDR TIMING CONTROL 04DDR TIMING CONTROL 05DDR TRAININGDF COMMON OPTIONSDIGI PLUS VRMNBIO COMMON OPTIONSPREFETCH SETTINGSSMU COMMON OPTIONSSMU COMMON OPTIONS1TWEAKERS PARADISE