I didn't verify myself, however many places on the web have people that have independantly verified this on every available NForce2 board. Further, Hypertransport spec doesn't require dividers to function, as the chipset itself, from NVidia, has seperate clock generators for the FSB, AGP, and PCI buses. These are each independantly locked, with the BIOS itself giving control over which can be tweaked. I can verify from results on that POS HDD that the bus must be locked, or at 215 FSB that drive would have instantly corrupted. It is an ancient Maxtor 3.6 GB drive, and is not the best overclocker out there (understatement alert).
As I said, verification is being done all over by both real evidence from PC Geigers, and by the theorist who comb the spec sheets.
I'm glad my initial doom and gloom due to manufacturer (particularly EPoX) driven FUD has been proven wrong.
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#!/bin/sh {who;} {last;} {pause;} {grep;} {touch;} {unzip;} mount /dev/girl -t {wet;} {fsck;} {fsck;} {fsck;} {fsck;} echo yes yes yes {yes;} umount {/dev/girl;zip;} rm -rf {wet.spot;} {sleep;} finger: permission denied
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