Socket G2

Socket G2
aka rPGA 988B
Type rPGA
Contacts 988
FSB protocol DMI
FSB frequency 2.5 GT/s, 4.8 GT/s[1]
Voltage range Max. 5 V with max. of 500 mA per pin
Processors
Intel Core i7 Dual-Core "Sandy Bridge" (32 nm)
i7-2620M, i7-2640M
Intel Core i7 Quad-Core "Sandy Bridge" (32 nm)
i7-2960XM, i7-2920XM, i7-2860QM, i7-2820QM, i7-2760QM, i7-2720QM, i7-2710QE, i7-2670QM, i7-2630QM
Intel Core i7 Dual-Core "Ivy Bridge" (22 nm)
i7-3520M, i7-3540M,
Intel Core i7 Quad-Core "Ivy Bridge" (22 nm)
i7 3610QM, I7 3630QM, i7-3940XM, i7-3920XM
Intel Core i5 Dual-Core "Sandy Bridge"
i5-2540M, i5-2520M, i5-2510E, i5-2450M, i5-2435M, i5-2430M, i5-2410M
Intel Core i3 Dual-Core "Sandy Bridge"
i3-2370M, i3-2350M, i3-2348M, i3-2330M, i3-2330E, i3-2328M, i3-2312M, i3-2310M
Intel Celeron "Sandy Bridge"
B800 Pentium B960-B980,2020m-2030m, 1005

This article is part of the CPU socket series

Socket G2, also known as rPGA 988B (there are Socket G/rPGA 989 sockets that can take Socket G2/rPGA 988B), is Intel's CPU socket used with their line of mobile Core i7, the successor to the Core 2 line, and also with several mobile Core i5 and Core i3 processors. It is based on Intel's Sandy Bridge architecture. Like its predecessor, socket G1 systems, it can only run in dual-channel memory mode, but with data rates up to 1600 MHz (as opposed to the triple-channel mode which is unique to the LGA-1366 platform and subsequent Xeon sockets). They are also known as FCPGA988 socket processors. Which should be pin compatible with PPGA988.[2]

Although nearly all motherboards using this socket are intended for mobile products like laptops, a few desktop boards using this do exist. Supermicro, for example, produced a number of mini ITX motherboards using the QM77 chipset.[3]

Technical specifications

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 3/5/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.