Originally posted by: SrGuapo
Originally posted by: bob4432
Originally posted by: Peter
No. Besides, all that divider/asynchronous panic applies only to classic north-bridge-centric architectures. With AMD64 CPU-integrated RAM controllers, there is no FSB, hence nowhere to run the RAM in sync with. Here, RAM always operates on a divider down from CPU _core_ clock, e.g. CPU/13 when you run DDR400 on a 2.6 GHz CPU. You're not on a bus:bus ratio, you're on a core:bus divider. Always.
Yes this concept is often misrepresented by people who cannot or will not grasp the new concept. This apparently includes Anandtech authors and BIOS user interface designers. *rolls eyes*
you are assuming he is using a new cpu, but what about a skt478 P4 that supposedly needs the bandwidth?
say he is running his a64 venice @ 2.7GHz and the memory at ~200MHz to get to the desired fsb. won't this affect performance?
Yes, but if his RAM cannot handle 270 MHz, then he must use a divider. Basically, when you OC, you want to find the highest CPU clock, and the highest mem clock (at whatevcer timings. Then set a divider that will give you the fastest RAM speed while still under the max speed you found earlier.
If desired, you can lower the multi to get a different RAM divider that may let you speed up the RAM a bit...
Edit: Yes it does depend on the CPU. I was assuming A64. Any other procs (al Intel procs and older AMD procs) will have a memory controller off the chip, meaning the RAM divider will hurt performance a bit...