Socket 5

E163314

Socket 5 is an early Intel CPU socket standard from the mid-1990s designed primarily for first-generation Pentium processors.

All labels observed (1)

Label Occurrences
Socket 5 canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (44)

Predicate Object
instanceOf CPU socket
microprocessor socket
alsoUsedBy third-party motherboard manufacturers
architectureSupport Intel Pentium
surface form: Intel P5 microarchitecture
compatibleWith some early Pentium-class CPUs from other vendors
dataBusWidth 64-bit
designedFor Intel Pentium
first-generation Pentium processors
electricalInterface 3.3 V-only Pentium CPUs
generation early Pentium era socket
hasFeature lever-actuated ZIF mechanism
introducedIn 1994
introducedInDecade 1990s
keying single-orientation keyed socket
manufacturer Intel Corporation
surface form: Intel
marketSegment business PCs
consumer PCs
mechanicalFormFactor square PGA socket
mountingType ZIF
notCompatibleWith Socket 4 processors
pinCount 320
pinGridArrayType PGA
platform x86
predecessor Socket 4
primaryUseEra mid-1990s
replaced Intel Pentium
surface form: Socket 4 as the main Pentium socket
standardizedBy Intel platform design guidelines
succeededBy Socket 7
successorSocketAddedFeatures Socket 7 added support for MMX Pentium processors
supportedFrontSideBusSpeed 50 MHz
60 MHz
66 MHz
supports single-processor configurations
write-back L2 cache via chipset
supportsProcessorFamily Intel Pentium OverDrive (for Socket 5)
Intel Pentium
surface form: Intel Pentium P54C
typicalCPUClockRange 60–133 MHz
usedIn AT and early ATX motherboards
usedWith Intel 430FX chipset
Intel 430FX chipset
surface form: Intel 430HX chipset

Intel 430FX chipset
surface form: Intel 430VX chipset

desktop motherboards
voltageSupport 3.1 V
3.3 V

How these facts were elicited

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Intel Pentium socket Socket 5