Originally posted by: gobucks
i think the more important question is this - is there a penalty between running a slower processor to a faster speed with a divider, as opposed to a faster processor running stock. It's obvious that the extra memory bandwidth helps, but what's not obvious is whether it hurts performance to run memory at the same speed out of sych. For example, if you run a 5/6 divider on a A64 3200+, and clock the memory back to 200MHz, then you'll end up with a 2.4GHz A64 running DDR400, equivalent to a 3800+. I'd like to see the 2 directly compared, to see if there is any penalty resulting solely from the divider and not related to the memory speed difference.
I've seen posts that say that using memory dividers adds inefficiencies on older MBs, but that Socket 939 MBs don't have that issue. Like you, I'd like to see some actual tests.
Frankly, it shouldn't be too difficult:
Using an NF4 Ultra or SLi MB:
Case one: Athlon 64 3200 (2.0GHz). Run at stock.
Case two: Same CPU, with multiplier set to 5, bus speed set to 400Mhz, and memory divider set to 100Mhz, HT ratio of 2.5.
With this setup, if there are no inherent inefficiencies in using memory dividers, the performance should be virturally identical for the two setups.
My system is old, so I can't run this experiment. Anyone else care to give it a whirl?