You shouldn't anyway because the VRM (the area between the back IO shield and the cpu socket, which converts 12v from power supply to ~ 1.35v the processor wants) doesn't have a heatsink, so there's a slight risk you'll overheat that circuit were you to overclock.Considering the board (and all A320 based boards) have only two memory slots, you will probably buy only one stick, as that makes most sense. RAM- 8GB 2400mhz The processor itself has a SOIC (system on chip) part inside it, basically it creates a couple SATA ports, a couple USB ports, the video card connects directly to the cpu, so you practically have everything connected to the cpu directly. They'll work fine, especially since you're not going to be able to overclock it.X4xx adds SLI support (by allowing the x16 from cpu to be split in 2). But, I'm not sure if I understand the RAM and CPU speed correctly. They'll work fine, especially since you're not going to be able to overclock it.The restrictions about overclocking can affect performance simply by the fact that you can't overclock. 4 is less likely to work...Will it not go over than that or set it to the advertised RAM speed of 3200mhz?I'm no expert but I have a R5 2600x on a Asus X470 with 2 sticks of Corsair Vengeance 3200 mhz. You'll want to be able to add a second 8 GB stick at a later time... 8 GB is enough for a lot of games today, but it will slowly become not enough.The problem about A320 is that your memory will run at 2133mhz which is a huge bottleneck, not to mention the power phases and VRM on all A320 boards is trash meaning yes you could face inferior Stock performance due to throttle.So it's just minute differences. Try XMP/DOCP if it doesn't work correctly manually slow it down or loosen timings until it works as intended. Achat sur Internet a prix discount de DVD et de produits culturels (livre et musique), informatiques et high Tech (image et son, televiseur LCD, ecran plasma, telephone portable, camescope, developpement photo numerique). Might as well just go for it lol3200 works on most Zen+ chips. The processor itself has a SOIC (system on chip) part inside it, basically it creates a couple SATA ports, a couple USB ports, the video card connects directly to the cpu, so you practically have everything connected to the cpu directly. However, there is still some hope, since i read MSI in late December came out with new BIOSes that support vcore offset, so it seems they are still trying to improve their BIOS. Remove All. I've been reading about how the CPU and RAM compatibility. I already have the Gigabyte GA-A320M-HD2 motherboard.
Does anyone know if the new (last year) Ryzen 5 1600 cpu (YD1600BBAF) is compatible with the MSI A320M Pro-VH Plus motherboard?