Type | PGA- ZIF |
---|---|
Chip form factors | PGA |
Contacts | 563 |
Voltage range | 1.30 - 1.35 V |
Processors | AMD Athlon XP-M (950–3000+) |
Successor | Socket S1 |
This article is part of the CPU socket series |
Socket 563 is a micro PGA CPU socket used for low-power (16 W and 25 W TDP) Athlon XP-M processors ("Thoroughbred" & "Barton"; Models 8 & 10). [1] [2] Socket 563 was also reportedly used for the "Appaloosa" Duron processors, which were never officially released but did see some very limited circulation. [3] [4] [5] [6] This socket is usually found in laptops and requires a low-power mobile processor in a special 563-pin µPGA package which is different from the Socket A (462 pin) package used for other Athlon processors. [7] Socket 563 supports 32-bit CPUs only.
Only a few desktop computer motherboards were manufactured that had Socket 563 sockets. Motherboards equipped with Socket 563 include the PCChips M863G Ver3 [8] (actually manufactured by ECS) and the ECS K7SOM. [9] Both motherboards came bundled with socket 563 processors as well as a heatsink.
Socket 563 was succeeded by Socket S1 in 2006.
Type | PGA- ZIF |
---|---|
Chip form factors | PGA |
Contacts | 563 |
Voltage range | 1.30 - 1.35 V |
Processors | AMD Athlon XP-M (950–3000+) |
Successor | Socket S1 |
This article is part of the CPU socket series |
Socket 563 is a micro PGA CPU socket used for low-power (16 W and 25 W TDP) Athlon XP-M processors ("Thoroughbred" & "Barton"; Models 8 & 10). [1] [2] Socket 563 was also reportedly used for the "Appaloosa" Duron processors, which were never officially released but did see some very limited circulation. [3] [4] [5] [6] This socket is usually found in laptops and requires a low-power mobile processor in a special 563-pin µPGA package which is different from the Socket A (462 pin) package used for other Athlon processors. [7] Socket 563 supports 32-bit CPUs only.
Only a few desktop computer motherboards were manufactured that had Socket 563 sockets. Motherboards equipped with Socket 563 include the PCChips M863G Ver3 [8] (actually manufactured by ECS) and the ECS K7SOM. [9] Both motherboards came bundled with socket 563 processors as well as a heatsink.
Socket 563 was succeeded by Socket S1 in 2006.