I realize fsb@160 with 4:5 is the obvious choice in terms of fsb only but sandra mem scores suggest fsb@150 with 3:4 are slightly preferred by P4/845G. Please note that you can test the two ratios under other DDR's than just 400.
If you're using 3:4 now, take your FSB divide it by 2.5 and multiply the result by 2.66 to get your FSB for 4:5 mode. Example: If fsb=133, ratio=3:4, DDR=2*[133*(4/3)]=354, the above calculation of FSB for 4:5 would be (133/2.5)*2.66~141. Verification, at FSB=141, ratio=4:5, DDR=2*[141*(5/4)]~353. Both sandra scores would about 8*354 or around 2800 in this case.
Conversely, if 4:5 is in use, take the FSB divide it by 2.66 first and multiply result by 2.5 next to obtain equivalent fsb for 3:4 mode.
Example: If FSB=160, ratio=5:4, DDR=2*[160*(5/4)]=400, the new FSB for 3:4 mode is (160/2.66)*2.5~150. Verification, at fsb=150, ratio=3:4, DDR=2*[150(4/3)]=400. In this case, sandra should read about 8*400 or 3200 for both modes.
This exercise should shed some light on two issues. Is the gain of few extra FSB's in going from 3:4 to 4:5 for the same DDR really worth it? Would the presence of 4:5 ratio in BIOS be important to 845D/845E boards if 845G results are extrapolated?