#21 Re: memorias kingston DDR2 800 figuran como 771. Por que?
Cito de una review de los x2 cuando recien salieron
http://www.hardwaresecrets.com/article/328/2
"The problem, however, is how the memory bus clock is achieved. Instead of being generated thru the CPU base clock (HTT clock, which is of 200 MHz), it divides the CPU internal clock. The value of this divider is half the value of the CPU multiplier.
For example, an AMD64 CPU with a clock multiplier of 12x will have a memory bus divider of 6. So this CPU will work at 2.4 GHz (200 MHz x 12) and its memories will work at 400 MHz (DDR2-800, 2,400 MHz / 6). Keep in mind that DDR and DDR2 memories are rated with double their real clock rate.
The problem is when the CPU clock multiplier is an odd number. For an AM2 CPU with a clock multiplier of 13x, theoretically its memory bus divider would be of 6.5. Since the AMD64 memory bus doesn’t work with “broken” dividers, it is rounded up to the next higher number, seven in this case. So while this CPU will work at 2.6 GHz (200 MHz x 13), its memory bus will work at 371 MHz (742 MHz DDR) and not at 400 MHz (800 MHz DDR), making the CPU to not achieve the maximum bandwidth the DDR2 memory can provide."
el 5600 es 2800/7 = 400 (800 ddr2). Sale bien por que el micro usa multi entero. La controladora de memoria la caga con un multi como el del creador del tema, 13.5. lo redondea a 7 y te da menos...