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Swapping cpu's
Can any one help me out.
I have a Gigabyte motherboard serial number GA-945GZM-S2 Rev 3.0 and a Gigabyte GA-M61PME-S2 Rev 2.0 Is it possible to remove the cpu from the GA-945GZM-S2 and place it into the GA-M61PME-S2 ??? If not, why and what must i do to use it ?? Many thanx to all Peter Queensland, Australia |
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Swapping cpu's
Peter wrote:
Can any one help me out. I have a Gigabyte motherboard serial number GA-945GZM-S2 Rev 3.0 and a Gigabyte GA-M61PME-S2 Rev 2.0 Is it possible to remove the cpu from the GA-945GZM-S2 and place it into the GA-M61PME-S2 ??? If not, why and what must i do to use it ?? Many thanx to all Peter Queensland, Australia One motherboard takes AMD AM2 processors and the other takes Intel LGA775. At the CPU socket level, they share *nothing* in common. You can't swap processors. Please explain what you're trying to achieve, with some details, for the best advice. Give some background details, so we don't have to guess :-) ******* The cheapest AMD processor I can find right now (with no heatsink and fan), is around $25. So a cheap AMD processor can be purchased *brand new* for very little. The purpose of such a CPU, would be as an enabler to getting the BIOS chip flash upgraded, so you could use a more expensive processor. You would borrow the heatsink and fan from the more expensive processor, to cool the $25 processor while completing the BIOS flash. To see what will work in your GA-M61PME-S2, you use the CPU support chart. It contains BIOS revision information, as well as the names of the processors. http://www.gigabyte.com/support-down....aspx?pid=2755 The BIOS chip on the motherboard, is an eight pin serial flash chip, near the faceplate end of the PCI Express x16 video card slot. I don't know exactly, how you're supposed to tell what BIOS release is in there. On larger (32-PLCC) flash chips, sometimes the manufacturer affixes a paper label, making visual verification of release number easy. But that chip is too small for paper labels, and the manufacturing process (the chip is soldered to the motherboard), makes it unlikely that a label would be part of the process. It would gum up the soldering equipment. And affixing the label afterwards, would take effort, and no motherboard manufacturer spends a penny more for labor than is absolutely necessary. http://www.gigabyte.com/fileupload/p...2/2755/887.jpg Paul |
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