I agree completely. People need to understand what you are giving up to get those few extra FSB. While it is nice that I have a couple of ASUS boards that do 520FSB with the E6300, I would much rather have an E6600/6700 on a good 975X board at 415~420FSB. Our discussions with the motherboard suppliers center around stability and peak performance at given FSB points and not on producing a board with the highest FSB in order to grab headlines. It just seems as if everyone has gotten into the FSB race and decided to ignore actual performance or stability for the sake of a good SuperPI or CPU-Z screenshot. Unfortunately, unless you show this capability people will say the board sucks.
The people complaining about the FSB limit on this board should realize at this time the board is more stable at its upper limits in actual use than any other non-Intel chipset (better than most of those) board available. While it does not provide the best performance in benchmarks, it does give the user great flexibility with their component choices.
In the end, not a single one of us would be able to tell the difference between this boards performance or the 680i/650i/965/975X without a benchmark in day to day operation. What matters is stability, features, support, warranty, and price in my opinion. I would just assume to throw out most of the bencmarks and look at overall platform stability at given FSB/Memory settings. For the benchmarks left, they should be compared on a clock by clock basis between chipsets. A wider audience might start to fully realize that you need that additional 35~50FSB on a 965 board above 400FSB to make up for performance losses due to memory strap changes as an example.
I would be a lot happier to have a stable P965 system at 390FSB than 450FSB any day due to the memory/mch timing improvements. When the first P965 boards were introduced, the suppliers were working towards that goal as they knew the best performance of the chipset at a reasonable cost was to get into the 385FSB range in a stable manner, people started complaining about not having high FSBs once they realized the overclocking headroom in the Core 2 Duos, so now we get 450FSB on average but did performance really improve that much? The new target for any "decent" P965 board is 500FSB and with it we get higher board costs, less stability overall, and lower performance at stock or near stock speeds just to name a few issues.
The problem is we expect our components to achieve at least a 50% improvement in speed without question. It is now expected this capability will be provided to us at no cost. Do we expect this from the automobile manufacturers? We pay extra for that level of performance. While I believe asking $1000 for a CPU or $400 for a desktop motherboard is way overboard the majority of time, I think it is wrong to expect, now demand, that same level of performance from a $150 CPU or $65 motherboard. Rant over...

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