I am a newbie, and have been doing a LOT of reading on this (great!) forum for a few months. I had been trying to learn as much as possible before trying to build my first system. The level of knowledge and informaiton in this forum is impressive!
After lots of reading I thought I understood the relationship between CPU speed, clock speed, FSB speed and memory speed for both the AMD and Intel platforms, as well as the basics of overclocking. However, some of the articles and tests I have read on Conroe have me a little confused.
Using a Conroe 6400 as an example, if I understand this correctly, the numbers are:
CPU Speed: 2.13 GHz
FSB: 1066 MHz
Multiplier: 8
"real" clock frequency is then: 2.13 Ghz / 8 = 266 MHz
Could also be computed as: 1066 MHz FSB / 4 = 266 Mhz
So, assuming I did not intend to overclock the system, I would need DDR 2 memory running at "real" clock frequencies of 266 MHz. This means 266 x 2 = DDR2 533. Anything slower would not work, and anything faster would be a waste (again, assuming no overclock).
However, most posts and reviews I have read about Conroe mention memory speeds faster than this, often as high as DDR800 and I have seen some test examples going even up to DDR1066. I don't think I have seen any cases where DDR533 is used even when people are talking about lower cost systems. Is overclocking the only reason everyone seems to be using much faster memory, or is there some other advantage of using memory that can run faster than the bus? Even assuming the reason for the faster memory is overclocking, DDR1066 means a clock speed of 533Mhz, a 100% increase over stock clock speed, which does not seem realistic. So, why is everyone spending money on memory that runs so much faster than the bus? Is it simply overclocking (and the apparently large headroom of Conroe), or am I doing something wrong?
Thanks for any help, and thanks again for all the great info!