Socket J
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
| Socket J (LGA 771) | ||
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| Specifications | ||
|---|---|---|
| Type | LGA | |
| Chip form factors | Flip chip land grid array | |
| Contacts | 771 | |
| Bus Protocol | ||
| FSB | 667 MT/s, 1066 MT/s, 1333 MT/s, 1600 MT/s | |
| Voltage range | ||
| Processors | Intel Dual-Core Xeon 5xxx
Intel Quad-Core Xeon E/X5xxx Intel Core 2 Extreme QX9775 |
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This article is part of the CPU socket series |
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Socket J, also known as LGA 771, is a CPU interface introduced by Intel in 2006. It is used in Intel's most recent DP-capable server processors, the Dual-Core Xeons codenamed "Dempsey" and "Woodcrest" and the Quad-Core Clovertown, as well as the new generation of Core 2 Extreme processors.
As its name implies, it is a land grid array with 771 contacts. The "J" in "Socket J" refers to the now-cancelled processor codenamed "Jayhawk", which was expected to debut alongside this interface. It is intended as a successor to Socket 604 and takes much of its design from LGA 775.


