On 9 Nov 2006 09:34:00 -0800, "Alanz"
<amitupadhyay@gmail.com> wrote:
>Hi,
>
>I was just wondering what does it mean when it said Socket A or Socket
>462 or Socket 754?
>Is it the property of the processor or the motherboard?
Yes and yes
It means the motherboard has that socket on it to fit that
logical configuration of CPU pin-interface, and the
appropriate bus interfaces for this, etc.
>Also can a processor be available in two different configuration ?
Yes, some are but it's also possible there are other more
subtle diferences besides just the socket type even if they
have a seemingly same name.
>
>I am asking this because I have been using AMD Athlon XP 2400+ with
>A7N266-VM and as far as I know this configuration was Socket A.
Yes it is, you can only use a socket A board for that CPU.
>But
>while searching for a compatible motheboard for my processor I came
>across Asrock motherboard on this page -
>http://www.asrock.com/support/CPU_Su...MD-support.htm
>
>On this page - the socket 462 motherboard with NVIDIA nForce2 Ultra
>400, model - K7NF2-RAID has AMD Athlon XP 2400+ as a supported CPU.
>Just wondering how is this possible?
Socket 462 is just another name for socket A, when they
listed it by # of pins, so you need a socket 462 / A, but
cannot use a socket 754, 939 or AM2.
your prior board was mATX, but the only Asrock nForce2
board, K7NF2-RAID, is full ATX and doesn't have integrated
video. I'd get another brand instead of Asrock for this
(among other) reasons.
On the other hand, now might be the time to consider if
you'd want to replace the CPU too, and perhaps the memory
since a couple of 256MB modules aren't worth much... by
replacing all three parts you'd not only have increased
performance but a more modern platform with support for
things like multiple SATA ports, DDR2 memory, PCI Express,
etc.