I understood FSB parity as the matching of frequency between the FSB and Memory in order to maximize data flow without controllers seeking to clip bus or memory speed...a way of seeking parity. parity would be putting 1333mhz ddr2 on a 1333mhz bus, or with dual channel using 667mhz ddr2 in dual channel mode to fill the bus thus reaching full parity. non parity would be using ddr2 800 in dual channel mode to fill a 1333mhz bus. The memory controller would clip the frequency until it found something it could work with say 620 or less ... you can see what happens... you are lowering the theoretical threshold by using non parity memory. many motherboards and even some of the new core i 7 may work with such uneven multipliers but what does it do to overall performance?