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Socket 8 is a unique rectangular CPGA socket with 387 pins. It supports FSB speeds ranging from 60 to 66 MHz, a voltage of 3.1 or 3.3 V, and support for the Pentium Pro and the Pentium II OverDrive CPUs. Socket 8 also has a unique pin arrangement pattern. One part of the socket has pins in a PGA grid, while the other part uses a SPGA grid. [1]
1 2.5 GT/s, 4.8 GT/s Socket FM1: 2011 AMD Llano Processors: Desktop PGA: 905 1.27 5.2 GT/s used for 1st generation APUs Socket FS1: 2011 AMD Llano Processors: Notebook PGA: 722 1.27 3.2 GT/s used for 1st generation Mobile APUs Socket AM3+ 2011 AMD FX Vishera [broken anchor] AMD FX Zambezi AMD Phenom II AMD Athlon II AMD Sempron: Desktop PGA ...
Socket 1, originally called the "OverDrive" socket, was the second of a series of standard CPU sockets created by Intel into which various x86 microprocessors were inserted. It was an upgrade to Intel's first standard 169-pin pin grid array (PGA) socket and the first with an official designation. Socket 1 was intended as a 486 upgrade socket ...
Historically, there are three platforms for the Intel P6 CPUs: Socket 8, Slot 1 and Socket 370. Slot 1 is a successor to Socket 8. While the Socket 8 CPUs (Pentium Pro) directly had the L2-cache embedded into the CPU, it is located (outside of the core) on a circuit board shared with the core itself. The exception is later Slot 1 CPUs with the ...
LGA 1156 (land grid array 1156), also known as Socket H [2] [3] or H1, is an Intel desktop CPU socket. The last processors supporting the LGA 1156 ceased production in 2011. It was succeeded by the mutually incompatible socket LGA 1155. LGA 1156, along with LGA 1366, were designed to replace LGA 775.
LGA 1200 is designed as a replacement for the LGA 1151 (known as Socket H4). LGA 1200 is a land grid array mount with 1200 protruding pins to make contact with the pads on the processor. It uses a modified design of LGA 1151, with 49 more pins on it, improving power delivery and offering support for future incremental I/O features.
The ODPR chips had 168 pins and functioned as complete swap-out replacements for existing chips, whereas the ODP chips had an extra 169th pin, and were used for inserting into a special 'Overdrive' socket on some i486 boards, which would disable the existing CPU without needing to remove it (in case that the existing CPU is surface-mounted ...
Socket 5 was created for the second generation of Intel P5 Pentium processors operating at speeds from 75 to 133 MHz [1] [2] as well as certain Pentium OverDrive and Pentium MMX processors with core voltage 3.3 V. It superseded the earlier Socket 4. It was released in March 1994. [3] Consisting of 320 pins, this was the first socket to use a ...