LGA 1356

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LGA 1356
TypeLGA
Contacts1356
FSB protocolIntel QuickPath Interconnect
FSB frequencyQuickPath
ProcessorsSandy Bridge-EN
Ivy Bridge-EN
PredecessorLGA 1366, LGA 1567
SuccessorLGA 2066, LGA 3647
Memory supportDDR3

This article is part of the CPU socket series
Xeon E5-2407
Xeon E5-2407, bottom view


LGA 1356, also called Socket B2, is an Intel microprocessor socket released in Q1 2012 with 1356 Land Grid Array pins. It launched alongside LGA 2011 to replace its predecessor, LGA 1366 (Socket B) and LGA 1567.[1] It's compatible with Intel Sandy Bridge-EN (also known as Romley-EN) and Ivy Bridge-EN microprocessors.

Description

[edit]

LGA 1356 has 1356 protruding pins to make contact with the pads on the processor. Processors of LGA 1356 and LGA 1366 sockets are not compatible with each other since they have different socket notches.

While LGA 2011 was designed for high-end desktops and high-performance servers, LGA 1356 was designed for the dual-processor and low-end segment of the server market.

It supports 64-bit wide DDR3 triple channel memory, and equipped with 1 Intel QPI connection and 24 PCI Express lanes. Meanwhile LGA 2011 supports quad channel memory, 2 QPI connections and 40 PCIe lanes. Socket LGA 1155, desktop socket of the same generation supports dual channel memory. Each DDR3 channel can support one more DIMM (only applicable to DDR3 and not DDR3-L).[2]

Plans were leaked in early 2011, with estimated releases in the first quarter of 2012.[3]In September 2011, releases were estimated to be at the end of the first quarter of 2012.[4]

Physical design

[edit]

Socket B2 processors have the following mechanical maximum load limits which should not be exceeded during heatsink assembly, shipping conditions, or standard use. Load above those limits will crack the processor die and make it unusable. The limits are included in the table below.

LocationDynamicStatic
IHS Surface890 N (200 lbf)266 N (60 lbf)

Processors using this socket have the same static load limit as previous models using LGA 1366 (Socket B).[5]

Compatible processors

[edit]

Sandy Bridge-EN

[edit]
SocketModelCores

(threads)

L3CacheCPU clock rateInterfaceSupported

memory

TDPRelease

date

Price

(USD)

StandardTurbo
LGA 1356

Dual Socket

Xeon E52470 v210 (20)25MB2.4GHz3.2GHzQPI

DMI 2.0

24× PCI-E 3.0

3× DDR3-160095WQ1 2014$1440
24708 (16)20MB2.3GHz3.1GHzMay 14, 2012
24502.1GHz2.9GHz$1106
2450L1.8GHz2.3GHz70W
2450Lv210 (20)25MB1.7GHz2.1GHz60WQ1 2014$1219
2448L8 (16)20MB1.8GHz2.1GHz70WMay 14, 2012$1151
2449L1.4GHz1.8GHz50WOEM
24406 (12)15MB2.4GHz2.9GHz3× DDR3-133395W$834
24302.2GHz2.7GHz$551
24201.9GHz2.4GHz$388
2430L2.0GHz2.5GHz60W$662
2428L1.8GHz2.0GHz$628
2418L4 (8)10MB2.0GHz2.1GHz50W$387
24074 (4)2.2GHzN/A3× DDR3-106680W$250
24031.8GHz$192
LGA 13561428L6 (12)15MB1.8GHz3× DDR3-133360W$395
14104 (8)10MB2.8GHz3.2GHz80WN/A
Pentium14072 (2)5MB2.8GHzN/A3× DDR3-1066
14032.6GHz
14051.2GHz1.8GHz40W2012-08$143

Ivy Bridge-EN

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Real World Technologies (September 25, 2010). "Real World Technologies - Intel's Sandy Bridge Microarchitecture". Realworldtech.com. Retrieved August 22, 2011.
  2. ^ Hiroshige Goto (April 9, 2010). "Sandy Bridge Interface" (PDF). PC Watch website. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 28, 2011. Retrieved November 12, 2011.
  3. ^ Gennadiy Shvets (February 8, 2011). "Details on Intel Xeon E5 product families". CPU World news. Retrieved November 12, 2011.
  4. ^ Theo Valich (September 9, 2011). "Intel Romley Delayed to End of Q1 2012? Chipset, CPU Issues Cited". Bright side of news. Retrieved November 12, 2011.
  5. ^ [1] page 30. From "Intel® Xeon® Processor E5-2400 Product Family Thermal/Mechanical Design Guide" by Intel
    LGA 1356
    TypeLGA
    Contacts1356
    FSB protocolIntel QuickPath Interconnect
    FSB frequencyQuickPath
    ProcessorsSandy Bridge-EN
    Ivy Bridge-EN
    PredecessorLGA 1366, LGA 1567
    SuccessorLGA 2066, LGA 3647
    Memory supportDDR3

    This article is part of the CPU socket series


    LGA 1356, also called Socket B2, is an Intel microprocessor socket released in Q1 2012 with 1356 Land Grid Array pins. It launched alongside LGA 2011 to replace its predecessor, LGA 1366 (Socket B) and LGA 1567.[1] It's compatible with Intel Sandy Bridge-EN (also known as Romley-EN) and Ivy Bridge-EN microprocessors.

    Description

    LGA 1356 has 1356 protruding pins to make contact with the pads on the processor. Processors of LGA 1356 and LGA 1366 sockets are not compatible with each other since they have different socket notches.

    While LGA 2011 was designed for high-end desktops and high-performance servers, LGA 1356 was designed for the dual-processor and low-end segment of the server market.

    It supports 64-bit wide DDR3 triple channel memory, and equipped with 1 Intel QPI connection and 24 PCI Express lanes. Meanwhile LGA 2011 supports quad channel memory, 2 QPI connections and 40 PCIe lanes. Socket LGA 1155, desktop socket of the same generation supports dual channel memory. Each DDR3 channel can support one more DIMM (only applicable to DDR3 and not DDR3-L).[2]

    Plans were leaked in early 2011, with estimated releases in the first quarter of 2012.[3]In September 2011, releases were estimated to be at the end of the first quarter of 2012.[4]

    Physical design

    Socket B2 processors have the following mechanical maximum load limits which should not be exceeded during heatsink assembly, shipping conditions, or standard use. Load above those limits will crack the processor die and make it unusable. The limits are included in the table below.

    LocationDynamicStatic
    IHS Surface890 N (200 lbf)266 N (60 lbf)

    Processors using this socket have the same static load limit as previous models using LGA 1366 (Socket B).[5]

    Compatible processors

    Sandy Bridge-EN

    SocketModelCores

    (threads)

    L3CacheCPU clock rateInterfaceSupported

    memory

    TDPRelease

    date

    Price

    (USD)

    StandardTurbo
    LGA 1356

    Dual Socket

    Xeon E52470 v210 (20)25MB2.4GHz3.2GHzQPI

    DMI 2.0

    24× PCI-E 3.0

    3× DDR3-160095WQ1 2014$1440
    24708 (16)20MB2.3GHz3.1GHzMay 14, 2012
    24502.1GHz2.9GHz$1106
    2450L1.8GHz2.3GHz70W
    2450Lv210 (20)25MB1.7GHz2.1GHz60WQ1 2014$1219
    2448L8 (16)20MB1.8GHz2.1GHz70WMay 14, 2012$1151
    2449L1.4GHz1.8GHz50WOEM
    24406 (12)15MB2.4GHz2.9GHz3× DDR3-133395W$834
    24302.2GHz2.7GHz$551
    24201.9GHz2.4GHz$388
    2430L2.0GHz2.5GHz60W$662
    2428L1.8GHz2.0GHz$628
    2418L4 (8)10MB2.0GHz2.1GHz50W$387
    24074 (4)2.2GHzN/A3× DDR3-106680W$250
    24031.8GHz$192
    LGA 13561428L6 (12)15MB1.8GHz3× DDR3-133360W$395
    14104 (8)10MB2.8GHz3.2GHz80WN/A
    Pentium14072 (2)5MB2.8GHzN/A3× DDR3-1066
    14032.6GHz
    14051.2GHz1.8GHz40W2012-08$143

    Ivy Bridge-EN

    See also

    References

    1. ^ Real World Technologies (September 25, 2010). "Real World Technologies - Intel's Sandy Bridge Microarchitecture". Realworldtech.com. Retrieved August 22, 2011.
    2. ^ Hiroshige Goto (April 9, 2010). "Sandy Bridge Interface" (PDF). PC Watch website. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 28, 2011. Retrieved November 12, 2011.
    3. ^ Gennadiy Shvets (February 8, 2011). "Details on Intel Xeon E5 product families". CPU World news. Retrieved November 12, 2011.
    4. ^ Theo Valich (September 9, 2011). "Intel Romley Delayed to End of Q1 2012? Chipset, CPU Issues Cited". Bright side of news. Retrieved November 12, 2011.
    5. ^ [1] page 30. From "Intel® Xeon® Processor E5-2400 Product Family Thermal/Mechanical Design Guide" by Intel
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