The LGA 775, or Socket T, is an Intel CPU socket for the desktop. Its job is to provide mechanical and electrical connections between the microprocessor and the PCB. LGA stands for Land Grid Array.
Will a Socket 478 Pentium 4 fit in an LGA775 socket?No. The pinout is totally different. Technically, LGA775 is not even a socket. The LGA775 actually has the pins sticking UP, and the processor is flat.Will an LGA775 Pentium 4 work in an LGA775 socket?Yes. However, support for Pentium 4s was discontinued in the P35 and later chipsets.Are there adapters to fit a Socket 478 Pentium 4 into an LGA775 socket?Yes. These are expensive, though, making it much more worthwhile to purchase an LGA775 P4 in the first place.
I7 Processors use socket LGA775.
that quad-core model uses the Intel LGA775 chipset
3.0 GHz Pentium 4s were manufactured for both Socket 478 and LGA775.
The E6600 uses LGA775.
If you have an older Socket 478 Pentium 4, the cooler will not fit properly. If you have one of the later LGA775 P4s, it should work, as Pentium Ds actually output more heat than a Pentium 4. But a cooler only rated for, say, a Core 2 Duo, without the Pentium 4 being taken into account, would not work, since Core 2s do not generate as much heat under full load.
LGA1366, LGA771, and LGA775
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It depends on what kind of motherboard you have. More details are needed for the answer. == Just plug 'LGA775 and IDE motherboard' into Google or another search engine and check out what motherboards are around. ASUS, MSI, DPI and Gighabyte boards with your requirements are readily available. NOTE: as most dual core (LGA775) sockets are now more commonly on (better spec) SATA boards a PCI IDE controller or a direct IDE to SATA converter will be required, if a SATA board is your choice.
You can use any LGA775 Pentium 4, Pentium D, or Celeron D with an 800, 533, or 400 Mhz FSB.
Not necessarily. There have been three different sockets used for Pentium 4 processors (Socket 423, Socket 478, and LGA775). They are not interchangeable without special adapters. Even when pin-compatible, motherboard updates may be necessary for the processors to actually work.
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.