socket 5 การใช้
- P5 Pentiums used Socket 4, while P54C started out on Socket 5 before moving to Socket 7 in later revisions.
- The OverDrive Processors for the Pentium 75, 90 and 100 were also released ( Socket 5, 3.3V ), running at 125, 150 and 166 MHz ( clock multiplier of 2.5 ).
- Differences between Socket 5 and Socket 7 are that Socket 7 has an extra pin and is designed to provide dual split rail voltage, as opposed to Socket 5's single voltage . ( However, not all motherboard manufacturers supported the dual voltage on their boards initially . ) Socket 7 is backwards compatible; a Socket 5 CPU can be placed in a Socket 7 motherboard.
- Differences between Socket 5 and Socket 7 are that Socket 7 has an extra pin and is designed to provide dual split rail voltage, as opposed to Socket 5's single voltage . ( However, not all motherboard manufacturers supported the dual voltage on their boards initially . ) Socket 7 is backwards compatible; a Socket 5 CPU can be placed in a Socket 7 motherboard.
- Differences between Socket 5 and Socket 7 are that Socket 7 has an extra pin and is designed to provide dual split rail voltage, as opposed to Socket 5's single voltage . ( However, not all motherboard manufacturers supported the dual voltage on their boards initially . ) Socket 7 is backwards compatible; a Socket 5 CPU can be placed in a Socket 7 motherboard.