Quote Originally Posted by shankstas View Post
I thought enabling OS/2 was if your running with more than 64 mb of ram? I guess I'm completely wrong and confused for that area. il go ahead and put it back to [Non-OS2] then. In What scenario would I want to enable OS/2 for then? Please explain! : (
According to wikipedia:

"OS/2 is a computer operating system, initially created by Microsoft and IBM, then later developed by IBM exclusively. The name stands for "Operating System/2", because it was introduced as the preferred operating system for IBM's "Personal System/2 (PS/2)" line of second-generation Personal Computers. OS/2 is no longer marketed by IBM, and IBM standard support for OS/2 was discontinued on December 31, 2006."

So if you're not using OS/2, then turn off the setting in the BIOS.

Quote Originally Posted by shankstas View Post
No the board doesnt correctly detect the corsair timings. It picks up 5-4-4-17 2T in CPUZ so Im gonna manually change it to what they say which is 5-5-5-12 (As for 2T it sais nothing about that so Il just leave it at auto which it was already at 2T). Do you think I should just manually set the command rate then? As for the voltage I already adjusted it as you said. I put 2.050v and the Monitor in the BIOS now shows it fluctuating from 2.09v to 2.11v but in PC probe it just gives a stable 2.10v and it rarely goes to 2.11v.
I have a pair of Corsair's. The'yre supposed to be 5-5-5-12-1T @ 1.9v, but the BIOS reports them as 5-5-5-18-2T @ 1.85v. I had an nForce 4 chipset-based motherboard not too long ago that told me the same thing. I think it might be something to with the fact that my RAM isn't on the QVL.

The "command rate" setting of "1T" resulted in my nForce4 motherboard not booting, but it works perfectly fine with the P5N32-E SLI.

If you get the chance, try testing your RAM inside a friend's computer.