40 pins
24-Pin
The Socket 4 Pentium processor from the early 1990's had 273 pins the socket 5 had 320.
Unfortunately, no. AMD uses the Pin Grid Array socket system, where the processor has many pins that fit into holes on the motherboard. Intel, on the other hand, uses what is called the Land Grid Array socket system, where there are many pins on the motherboard's processor socket that connect with contacts on the processor. They're completely reverse systems, and attempting to use one with the other will result in severe, unrepairable damage to both the processor and the motherboard. Please do not attempt to use any Intel processor with a motherboard that uses AMD processors, or vice-versa.
Currently FCPGA988 is the most popular Intel mobile socket, the most used socket for AMD is the 638-pin S1 socket.
Yes it does, with a ddr2 ram
draw the Z80 processor and explain five of its pin function
any processor depending on your motherbard. contact your maufacturer for more details.
You can not change the processor port on a motherboard, you can change the processor to another with the same pin set, but not the port itself. If you want to use a diffrent processor you would need to replace the motherboard with one that supports the pin set of the new processor.
The 8085 is a 40 pin ic because Intel designed it that way.
the pin configuration of a processor means that the diagramatic representation of block diagram of processor representing various pins and the function of that pins
That depends upon the socket type the processor was made for. The Pentium 4 was released in three socket types: # Socket 423 (423 Pins) # Socket 478 (478 Pins) # LGA775 (775 Contacts) Note: in the case of the LGA775 the processor does not have pins. Instead it has contacts, while the socket actually has pins that connect to the contacts on the processor.
i dnt know