The new Intel CPU socket, set to house the upcoming Arrow Lake desktop processors, has been unveiled. In a bit of a weird way. It's going to be the socket for desktop versions of the Meteor Lake chip architecture, which are only going to appear in the boring embedded space.
At this year's Embedded World conference in Germany, Intel has been letting visitors get all handsy with its new embedded Meteor Lake platform. The previously laptop-only chips don't require a separate motherboard chipset, so they're perfect from the space-restricted embedded sector. But something else that was showcased at the event was the LGA 1851 processor socket—Intel's replacement for LGA 1700, the socket which has been in service since the 12th Generation of Core CPUs.
We've known Intel was moving to a new socket design for its post-Raptor Lake desktop processors for quite some time. But a report on the Embedded World event by ComputerBase confirms all of the details and has pictures of the new socket if you want to see all those new pins in detail.
Intel has retained the same 37.5 mm × 45 mm socket size but stuffed an additional 151 pins into the same area. To prevent you from trying to fit an LGA 1700 chip into the socket, though, notches in the plastic surround are in a different location.
Some of the extra pins are going to be for PCI Express lanes, but I suspect quite a few of them won't be used until later processors require them. The latest 14th Gen Core CPUs offer 16 PCIe 5.0 and four PCIe 4.0 lanes, and the higher spec ones can be split into two groups of eight, allowing for a PCIe 5.0 SSD, like the Nextorage X series, to be directly connected to the CPU.
However, that essentially wastes four lanes and there's no way around this. In some motherboards, putting any SSD into the dedicated PCIe 5.0 M.2 slot forces the main graphics card slot into x8 mode. With LGA 1851, that problem will be a thing of the past, because even though the next generation of desktop CPUs will still only
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