No and the bus is also Called the North Bridge or if u have another 1 its called the South Bridge the easyest way to understand all the hardware in ur computer is:
Processor is ur Engine
RAM is ur Gas
Harddrive is ur Cargo
North and South Bridge is ur HighWay
hope this helps ya
CPU operates from 166 MHz to more than 3 GHz system can operate from 133 MHz to 400 MHz. CPU is faster than the system bus
System bus
The Front Side Bus (FSB) connects the processor (CPU) in your computer to the system memory.
The system bus is usually inside of the CPU, but I guess it depends on the processor and the motherboard. Usually, CPU clock speeds are faster, as they are measured in GHz, while the system bus speed is usually measured in MHz. Hope this helped! SeanHolshouser
The bus that connects the CPU to main memory on the motherboard. I/O buses, which connect the CPU with the systems other components, branch off of the system bus."The system bus is called the frontside bus, memory bus, local bus, or host bus."See the Related Links below.
A system bus frequency is 1600 MHz. A CPU frequency is 166 MHz to almost 4GHz.
An expansion bus will not work in sync with the CPU. In addition, it will not work with the system clock.
On modern systems, the CPU. *Very* old systems (Apple II, "IBM" PC) use the same CPU and bus speeds.
System Bus
Your data busses sends information from component to component i.e. your FSB (front side bus)/system bus/internal bus communicates between your CPU and RAM, the faster it runs, the faster information is moved between your RAM and CPU giving your CPU quicker access to that data.
I suppose you mean "CPU" The system bus is typically set at a vastly lower frequency than the CPU. They handle different things, so comparing them to each other for "speed" isn't really possible. This is similar to asking if the speed of a plane is higher than the hardness of a rock.
System Bus or Front side bus