Chapter 2: BIOS information 2-15
VDDNB Offset Voltage [Auto]
Allows you to set the VDDNB Offset voltage. The values range from 0.00625V to
0.500V with a 0.00625V interval.
2.4.10 DRAM Voltage [Auto]
Allows you to set the DRAM voltage. The values range from 1.35V to 2.00V with a 0.005V
interval.
2.4.11 SB 1.1V Voltage [Auto]
Allows you to set the Southbridge 1.1V voltage. The values range from 1.1V to 1.4V with a
0.01V interval.
2.4.12 1.1Vsb Voltage [Auto]
Allows you to set the 1.1Vsb voltage. The values range from 1.1000V to 1.4000V with a 0.1V
interval.
2.4.13 APU1.2V Voltage [Auto]
Allows you to set the APU (Accelerated Processor Unit) 1.2V voltage. The values range from
1.2000V to 1.8000V with a 0.01V interval.
2.4.14 VDDA Voltage [Auto]
Allows you to set the VDDA voltage. The values range from 2.5000V to 2.8000V with a 0.1V
interval.
• The values of the CPU Offset Voltage, VDDNB Offset Voltage, DRAM Voltage,
SB 1.1V Voltage, 1.1Vsb Voltage, APU1.2V Voltage, and VDDA Voltage items are
labeled in different color, indicating the risk levels of high voltage settings.
• The system may need better cooling system to work stably under high voltage
settings.
2.4.15 DIGI+ VRM
CPU Load Line Calibration [Auto]
Load-line Calibration is dened by AMD VRM specications and affects CPU voltage. The
CPU working voltage will decrease proportionally to CPU loading. Higher load-line calibration
would get higher voltage and better overclocking performance, but increase the CPU and
VRM thermal. This item allows you to adjust the voltage range from the following percentages
to boost the system performance: 0% (Regular), 60% (Medium), 80% (High), and 100%
(Extreme). Conguration options: [Auto] [Regular] [Medium] [High] [Extreme]
The actual performance boost may vary depending on your CPU speciation.
CPU/NB Load Line Calibration [Auto]
Allows you to select the CPU/NB Load-Line Calibration mode. Conguration options: [Auto]
[Regular] [High] [Extreme]