Originally posted by: terentenet
On the dividers situation. How is it correct for 1:1? If FSB is 300, memory should be 300? or 600?
FSB is quad pumped, DDR2 is just doubled.
FSB 300 quad pumped = 1200MHz
Memory 300 = 600MHz
Memory 600 = 1200MHz
How is it good? Memory at 300 or 600?
In your case, memory should be 300, but I see no point not to set it to work at 600. The higher the better if your FSB can't go higher.
Your Ram is very expensive PC8500, that's a Ram speed of 533Mhz....if you could set your FSB speed to 533 Mhz you'd be running in 1:1 mode. Otherwise, you'll have to use a divider.
Dividers are not optimal when the ratio is negative for the memory, say a FSB ratio of 5:4, meaning that FSB speed is higher than Ram speed, i.e.: you set your FSB speed to 333 Mhz but your Ram is running at 266 Mhz.
Different is when your Ram is running at a higher speed than your FSB's (4:5) .....there's a bottleneck, yes....but it is a better situation than 5:4....
In 1:1 (synchronous FSB:Ram speeds), if you set your FSB speed to, say 333 Mhz, your RAM memory should be set to 333 Mhz, that's DDR2 667 speed (333 Mhz FSB x 2).
To know the real speed of the FSB itself, related to the CPU, you have to multiply your FSB speed by 4. In the example above, say you set your FSB speed to 333Mhz, then your FSB speed would be 1333Mhz (333Mhz x 4 QuadPumped FSB).