Difference between LGA775 and PLGA775 (mostly this)

Autechre

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Dec 7, 2015
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I need at least provable, a little bit detailed question...it seems I can't Google such a thing!

Can anyone tell about ASUS P5LD2-VM/S-1394 v1.0, but not really!

Can anyone tell...does Celeron D's has the same compability with respected sockets?

Well it says: Celeron D, but...all of them are compatible?

I'm kinda scared to put Celeron D 356 beast into this, although FSB speed and this thing are matching well!

Please, help me D:

SORRY FOR DOUBLE THREAD, COULDN'T FIND THE 1ST ONE!
 
A quick google reveals to me that an Asus P5LD2-VM is listed as having a socket LGA775 (Pentium 4), not Celeron. It would appear not compatible unless I am looking at the wrong motherboard, which I suppose is possible given its age.
 
In this case I think you are fine if your CPU is one of these three:

Celeron D 356 (65nm,3.33 GHz, 533 FSB, L2:512KB, revD0, LGA775) 1.03G 0901
GO

Celeron D 356 (revB1, 65nm,3.33 GHz, 533 FSB, L2:512KB, LGA775) ALL 0406
GO

Celeron D 356 (revC1,65nm,3.33 GHz, 533 FSB, L2:512KB, LGA775) ALL 0606
GO

What CPU are you replacing? Or are you just putting this together with available parts? I wouldn't call practically any Celeron a beast. They are Pentiums with less cache and some features disabled usually.

Sadly LGA775 was used for several generations of processors. They are not all supported across the board. Different wattages and bus speeds being the most common problem.

 


I'm just dumpster diver, gotta check if I can really mix 'em together! (this ASUS motherboards n Cel D proc)
So, you're saying that THERE'S WILL BE NO PROBLEM using Celeron D 356 with this board?
Well yeah, same sockets, but this little P (PLGA775) won't give much hope + this Celeron have way too much pwr (I guess)

And, about FSB n stuff, they all green! So still guessin'

P.S I'll consider this as my new rig (instead of i3-540 LGA1556 stuff) so yeah, your answer would make a lot of sense!
 
Not sure why you think that this CPU requires too much power. It is supported, and it isn't even a very power hungry processor. 86W, about on par with the full-power consumer grade chips available today. Supports the Extreme Core 2 duo even at 115W. That celeron is a single core, so power to performance ratio is somewhat lacking.

 


Don't compare these chips, the gap is too big, in terms of basically everything!
But the only thing that matters: will it work? Because, you're slightly off-track :)
Your answer matters to me! 😀