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I have an older PC with a 1.2 Ghz Celeron Processor in it. I wanted to replace it with a 2.53 Ghz Celeron D chip out of another (broken) computer. Does anyone know if that's even possible? I get the impression that the Celeron motherboard is a P3 slot and that the Celeron D motherboad is a P4 slot.

2006-09-01 16:22:31 · 7 answers · asked by Anonymous in Computers & Internet Hardware Desktops

7 answers

No you cannot, which is one reason why I hate Intel for sticking with the name "Celeron" all these years. The socket interface on the motherboard has changed several times since the first Celerons came out. Your current one is several generations old and is on a different interface altogether.

You need to build from scratch at this point, or if money is tight, look to buying a cheap one from a major retailer like Dell or HP. Even the lowest performing models today will crush your current PC in every aspect (no offense)...

2006-09-01 16:31:03 · answer #1 · answered by SirCharles 6 · 1 0

properly to appreciate how that works, you may desire to appreciate slightly approximately how processors artwork. each and every thing in computing gadget processing is converted to whats reported as binary code. maximum persons understand that binary code interprets each and every thing to 1s and 0s, yet maximum persons have not got any concept why. that is basic somewhat, each and every thing on your computing gadget processed with the help of pulses of electrical energy, and that's the place binary is equipped in. a million ability deliver a pulse of electrical energy, 0 ability do no longer deliver a pulse of electrical energy. Now we get to what GHz ability. GHz is short for GigaHertz. A unmarried Hertz (and definite that is suitable grammar) is one sign, the two a a million or 0. that's transmitting the binary from the code into the pulses of electrical energy. So a million GHz is a million billion indicators. extra GHz ability a speedier processor, although if it does not inevitably recommend a extra advantageous processor. issues like the style of transistors, the dimensions of the L1, L2, L3, and each so often L4 caches, the speeds of the countless caches, the CPU socket, and so on can replace that is overall performance. For you, because your remoted to particularly i3 processors, the terrific one accessible is the Intel i3-3240

2016-12-18 03:26:02 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

No

Intel's Celeron D is Socket LGA775

Intel's Celeron 1.2GHz is Socket 370

2006-09-01 16:54:36 · answer #3 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Do you have the part number of your motherboard ? That is the only way to check.

Check the manufacturer website for the descriptions and spec to see if the mother board supports it.

2006-09-01 16:26:03 · answer #4 · answered by Just_curious 4 · 0 0

It depends what kind of chip is compatible with your mobo. If you use the wrong one you could fry the whole thing.

2006-09-01 16:29:56 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

you take off the CPU cover, stick a calculator to the 1.2Ghz and key this in...

1.2 = 2.53

let me know if it works.

2006-09-01 16:25:55 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

You can buy a mac

2006-09-01 16:24:43 · answer #7 · answered by carlos o 4 · 0 2

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