iceclock Illustrious Dec 4, 2010 13,088 0 42,960 Feb 13, 2011 #2 no u cannot they are completely 2 different sockets,
iceclock Illustrious Dec 4, 2010 13,088 0 42,960 Feb 13, 2011 #4 no problem, just to let u know sockets arent interchangeable, so most of the time u cant, its possible theres special motherboard where u can, but i find no use for these boards for the major spectrum of public computer users
no problem, just to let u know sockets arent interchangeable, so most of the time u cant, its possible theres special motherboard where u can, but i find no use for these boards for the major spectrum of public computer users
christop Distinguished Sep 30, 2008 3,079 0 20,960 Feb 13, 2011 #5 I have never seen a special motherboard where you can use different sockets on one board.
iceclock Illustrious Dec 4, 2010 13,088 0 42,960 Feb 13, 2011 #6 i have, ive seen an intel/amd mobo from asrock before, quite weird
saaiello Splendid Oct 13, 2009 4,042 0 23,460 Feb 13, 2011 #7 http://www.pcstats.com/articleview.cfm?articleID=1829 ECS made the first and last Hybrid board way back in the Pentium 4 days it was able to use an LGA 775 or an AM2 Athlon 64 pretty cool eh. It needed an expansion card to use the AM2 CPU though. Did not use the same socket for both.
http://www.pcstats.com/articleview.cfm?articleID=1829 ECS made the first and last Hybrid board way back in the Pentium 4 days it was able to use an LGA 775 or an AM2 Athlon 64 pretty cool eh. It needed an expansion card to use the AM2 CPU though. Did not use the same socket for both.
iceclock Illustrious Dec 4, 2010 13,088 0 42,960 Feb 14, 2011 #8 yes my mistake, but it was a hybrid board yes, some its similar but not the same, i agree say hello thanks for the correction
yes my mistake, but it was a hybrid board yes, some its similar but not the same, i agree say hello thanks for the correction