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Socket 940

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Socket 940
TypePGA-ZIF
Chip form factorsOPGA
Contacts940
FSB frequency200 MHz System clock
800/1000 MHz HyperTransport link
Voltage range0.8 - 1.55 V
ProcessorsAMD Athlon 64 FX
AMD Opteron

This article is part of the CPU socket series

Socket 940 is a 940-pin socket for 64-bit AMD server processors. This socket is entirely square in shape and pins are arranged in a grid with the exception of four key pins used to align the processor and the corners. AMD's Opteron and the older AMD Athlon 64 FX (FX-51) use Socket 940.

Technical specifications

Microprocessors designed for this socket were intended to be used in a server platform, and as such provide additional features to provide additional robustness. One such feature is only the acceptance of registered memory.[1]

There is a new 940-pin socket called AM2. Despite having the same number of pins, Socket 940 and AM2 are not pin-compatible. This means a Socket 940 processor will not fit in an AM2 socket and vice versa. This is because all 64-bit AMD processors integrate the memory controller onto the CPU die rather than have a discrete chip on the motherboard.[2]

See also

References

  1. ^ Kronlund, Doug (2004-06-27). "Socket 940 vs. 939". Short-Media. Retrieved 2007-01-28.
  2. ^ Bert Töpelt (2006-05-23). "AM2: AMD Reinvents Itself". Tom's Hardware Guide. Retrieved 2007-01-28. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)