Mondoman
Splendid
mark,
The FSB *clock* is 266MHz for Core2Duo CPUs. However, Intel CPUs transfer 4 pieces of data per clock cycle, so the data rate is 1066MHz. Most recent Pentium 4/D CPUs run at a 200MHz (=800MHz data rate) FSB. Older Pentium 4/D CPUs run at a 133MHz (=533MHz data rate) FSB.
For memory, the key is that you want the memory throughput to be at least as high as the FSB's data rate, so the FSB will not have to "wait" for the memory bus.
Thus, if you are using a non-OC'd C2D CPU, the FSB data rate is 1066MHz, so we want to match our memory throughput to that for a 1:1 ratio. DDR2-533 has a 533MHz data rate (but 266MHz clock speed), and that data rate gets doubled when the system is running in dual-channel mode; 533Mhz data rate x 2 (dual channel mode) = 1066MHz data rate, matching the non-OC'd C2D CPU FSB data rate.
WRT your post, the msi site is talking about FSB data rate, not clock rate. However, most of the FSB speed references in this article are to clock rate, not data rate.
Bottom line, for people who will never ever never overclock, get DDR2-533. But since it seems pretty silly not to overclock C2D CPUs at least a bit, others should get DDR2-667 or DDR2-800.
The FSB *clock* is 266MHz for Core2Duo CPUs. However, Intel CPUs transfer 4 pieces of data per clock cycle, so the data rate is 1066MHz. Most recent Pentium 4/D CPUs run at a 200MHz (=800MHz data rate) FSB. Older Pentium 4/D CPUs run at a 133MHz (=533MHz data rate) FSB.
For memory, the key is that you want the memory throughput to be at least as high as the FSB's data rate, so the FSB will not have to "wait" for the memory bus.
Thus, if you are using a non-OC'd C2D CPU, the FSB data rate is 1066MHz, so we want to match our memory throughput to that for a 1:1 ratio. DDR2-533 has a 533MHz data rate (but 266MHz clock speed), and that data rate gets doubled when the system is running in dual-channel mode; 533Mhz data rate x 2 (dual channel mode) = 1066MHz data rate, matching the non-OC'd C2D CPU FSB data rate.
WRT your post, the msi site is talking about FSB data rate, not clock rate. However, most of the FSB speed references in this article are to clock rate, not data rate.
Bottom line, for people who will never ever never overclock, get DDR2-533. But since it seems pretty silly not to overclock C2D CPUs at least a bit, others should get DDR2-667 or DDR2-800.