933 FSB is for the overclockers. Its a lot of headroom for future processors. I mean, the first i850 boards had 156FSB, and people were saying wtf you need 156FSB for when P4's were barely pushing 133? Its just headroom.
Lets say you get a 2.26B. Run it at 17x175 = 3Ghz, something you cant do with the P4T series. Now you want high RDRam clock, simply set the RDRam clock to 3X, and you have 175x3 = PC1050. You can do this with a modd'ed TH7 II. What this basically means is that for RDRam overclockers, they can have the same joy of running high FSB as the DDR people. Of course if you have godly RDRam and decide to run 175x4, that'd be PC1400 :Q
Btw, if you dont like your TH7 II, I know I would.
Lets say you get a 2.26B. Run it at 17x175 = 3Ghz, something you cant do with the P4T series. Now you want high RDRam clock, simply set the RDRam clock to 3X, and you have 175x3 = PC1050. You can do this with a modd'ed TH7 II. What this basically means is that for RDRam overclockers, they can have the same joy of running high FSB as the DDR people. Of course if you have godly RDRam and decide to run 175x4, that'd be PC1400 :Q
Btw, if you dont like your TH7 II, I know I would.