How to stabilize Kingbank Yin Jue DDR5 6000 memory frequency?

The transition between combat moves suddenly started feeling clunky, and in a precision-based action game, that kind of desync is a complete nightmare. Looking at the logs, the XMP profile for the Kingbank Yin Jue DDR5 6000 had poor compatibility with my motherboard, causing the memory controller to trigger frequent error corrections at 6000MHz, which sent frame times spiking to 48ms. I tried enabling the High Performance power plan in Windows, but all that did was make my fans louder while the drops persisted—totally pointless. I eventually went into the BIOS, manually downclocked the XMP frequency to 5800MHz, and bumped the memory voltage from 1.35V to 1.38V. In AIDA64 memory stress tests, the system finally ran for four hours straight without a single error, and the frame rate settled into a tight 105-115 FPS range. I actually tried flashing the latest factory firmware first, which bricked the RAM detection until I cleared the CMOS to save it. Memory temps hovered between 50-56℃ and the CPU stayed at 68-75℃. Stability tests confirm the drops are gone, and the glitch is fixed.
Category:Troubleshooting Last updated:March 18, 2026 8:47 PM