At the moment, this only holds true for the DFI Award BIOS
I stumbled onto this by accident when I was overclocking on a divider. I dont know if this is something everyone knew (except me) and just didnt talk about but here we go:
I`d been using a calculator to figure out the sweet spots between RAM and CPU speeds.
I was finding that if I put my RAM on a divider, it wasnt bringing up the same values as what I expected..e.g...
300x9 on a 166 divider... I was expecting to see 166/200 x 300 = 249MHz on the RAM. I was getting 245.5 Not a massive difference here, but the gaps can be pretty big.
We know that CPU speed= HTT frequency x multiplier. for 1:1 memory, the CPU frequency is divided by the multiplier again to get the RAM frequency, when you put the RAM on a divider, the CPU speed is divided by an increased number to get the RAM frequency.
SO (so far).... 1:1, RAM= CPU speed/multiplier
180 divider RAM= CPU speed/multiplier+1
166 divider: RAM= CPU speed/multiplier+2 e.g... CPU speed=2700 (300x9) a 166 divider puts the RAM on 2700/11 = 245.5, which is what it is.
150 divider RAM= CPU speed/multiplier+3
to be continued...if anyone really wants to try this on other mobos, be my guest and I can add the info.
Kenny
I stumbled onto this by accident when I was overclocking on a divider. I dont know if this is something everyone knew (except me) and just didnt talk about but here we go:
I`d been using a calculator to figure out the sweet spots between RAM and CPU speeds.
I was finding that if I put my RAM on a divider, it wasnt bringing up the same values as what I expected..e.g...
300x9 on a 166 divider... I was expecting to see 166/200 x 300 = 249MHz on the RAM. I was getting 245.5 Not a massive difference here, but the gaps can be pretty big.
We know that CPU speed= HTT frequency x multiplier. for 1:1 memory, the CPU frequency is divided by the multiplier again to get the RAM frequency, when you put the RAM on a divider, the CPU speed is divided by an increased number to get the RAM frequency.
SO (so far).... 1:1, RAM= CPU speed/multiplier
180 divider RAM= CPU speed/multiplier+1
166 divider: RAM= CPU speed/multiplier+2 e.g... CPU speed=2700 (300x9) a 166 divider puts the RAM on 2700/11 = 245.5, which is what it is.
150 divider RAM= CPU speed/multiplier+3
to be continued...if anyone really wants to try this on other mobos, be my guest and I can add the info.
Kenny