When OCing, is it better to have the FSB running at certant specific frequencies. Lets say when OCing the FSB to 333mhz, does that allow other components to run at stock speeds?
Obviously, when bumping up the FSB on a motherboard it inturn OC's everything related to the FSB - RAM, Chipsets, HDs, etc. What I'm asking is, is there certant frequencies, maybe 333, or 400mhz that dividers kick in, and are used that allow everything in the system besides the CPU to run at stock specs.
I see alot of people who have OC'ed systems run the FSB at 333 and 400, I was just wondering if this was the reason.
Thanks!
Obviously, when bumping up the FSB on a motherboard it inturn OC's everything related to the FSB - RAM, Chipsets, HDs, etc. What I'm asking is, is there certant frequencies, maybe 333, or 400mhz that dividers kick in, and are used that allow everything in the system besides the CPU to run at stock specs.
I see alot of people who have OC'ed systems run the FSB at 333 and 400, I was just wondering if this was the reason.
Thanks!