Quote Originally Posted by mongoled View Post
I understand the point you have made regards CPU overclocking and having the ability to have finer control over the final clock speed.

Though I am not following how this applies to memory overclocking in the sense that a ref clock board can clock so much more higher than a non ref clock board.

The granularity that non ref clock board gives is not going to effect the memory in terms of total frequency, is it because the ref clock board can avoid memory holes so that they can clock at higher frequencies ?
Im not sure yet. There definitely are holes in applied settings though alot of them. I know one thing is for sure my fury x does not like over 2...

My 8400 does not like 150