Combining the 975X Express Chipset with the ICH7R Southbridge and a 7600 GT is essentially the "Golden Path" for a mid-2000s Hackintosh. It’s the closest you can get to the DNA of the original Mac Pro 1,1 and the Late 2006 iMacs.
Here is why that specific hardware trio makes the installation process feel almost like a native Mac experience:
1. The 975X/ICH7R: Native Identity
The Intel 975X was the high-end enthusiast chipset during the Intel transition. Because Apple used the 975X in the first Mac Pro, OS X treats this hardware with "native" respect.
ICH7R Storage: This is the big win. The SATA controller on the ICH7R is natively supported by Apple’s AppleICH7SATA.kext. You often don't need third-party injects or modified kexts to see your hard drives in the Disk Utility of a Tiger or Leopard installer.
PCI Bus Stability: Unlike later chipsets (P35, P45) which sometimes require "LPC" patches to get power management working, the 975X is usually recognized "out of the box."
2. The 7600 GT: The Driver King
As you noted, this GPU is the linchpin. Since the 7600 GT was an actual BTO (Build to Order) option for the early Mac Pros:
No "NVinject" or "GraphicsEnabler": If you use a card with a compatible Device ID, you can often get full QE/CI acceleration with zero effort.
Resolution Support: It handles the 1920x1200 resolution of a 23-inch Cinema Display over DVI natively, including the proper EDID handshake that later "experimental" drivers sometimes struggle with.
3. The "Legacy Triple Threat" Performance
Using this combination allows you to bypass the most common Hackintosh headaches:
ComponentWhy it makes it "Easy"975X NorthbridgeProvides a highly compatible memory controller and PCIe lane management that OS X 10.4 expected.ICH7R SouthbridgeNative SATA and USB 2.0 support. No "waiting for root device" errors or USB dropouts.7600 GT GPUProvides the essential Core Image/Quartz Extreme across all three OS versions (Tiger to Snow Leopard).
Comparison: Why not 965 or G31?
While the 965 chipset (like the P965) was popular, it often used the ICH8 or ICH9 southbridge. While those work, they frequently require more tinkering with IOATAFamily patches in Tiger. The ICH7R is the last "true" legacy-friendly controller for 10.4.11.
One Small Caution for 10.4.11:
Even with the 975X, ensure your BIOS is set to "Enhanced" or "AHCI" mode for the SATA ports. Some 975X boards (like the ASUS P5W DH Deluxe) have multiple SATA controllers (JMicron vs. Intel). Sticking to the Intel ICH7R ports is the secret to that "easy" installation you're looking for.
It’s a "period-correct" powerhouse that avoids the "Frankenstein" feel of trying to force Tiger onto newer Core i-series hardware.