Originally posted by: TitanDiddly
I imagine they come off of wire stock, then are stamped into shape and plated.
Originally posted by: MrDudeMan
i work with wires and devices with way tighter tolerances than CPU pins, and honestly it is not nearly as hard as it may seem. i make preload wires for piezoelectric actuators on a daily basis and the tolerances are +/- 1 microinch, and i can do it by hand with very few tools. im sure the process to make and shape CPU pins is automated, which probably gives it somewhere in the +/-.1 microinch tolerances. one thing that should be noted is the length of the pins...they make them as short as possible because any wire or pin switching high current acts like a huge antenna and it radiates noise into everything around it.
Originally posted by: TitanDiddly
Originally posted by: MrDudeMan
i work with wires and devices with way tighter tolerances than CPU pins, and honestly it is not nearly as hard as it may seem. i make preload wires for piezoelectric actuators on a daily basis and the tolerances are +/- 1 microinch, and i can do it by hand with very few tools. im sure the process to make and shape CPU pins is automated, which probably gives it somewhere in the +/-.1 microinch tolerances. one thing that should be noted is the length of the pins...they make them as short as possible because any wire or pin switching high current acts like a huge antenna and it radiates noise into everything around it.
How much current could a single CPU pin be handling?![]()
Originally posted by: TitanDiddly
Originally posted by: MrDudeMan
i work with wires and devices with way tighter tolerances than CPU pins, and honestly it is not nearly as hard as it may seem. i make preload wires for piezoelectric actuators on a daily basis and the tolerances are +/- 1 microinch, and i can do it by hand with very few tools. im sure the process to make and shape CPU pins is automated, which probably gives it somewhere in the +/-.1 microinch tolerances. one thing that should be noted is the length of the pins...they make them as short as possible because any wire or pin switching high current acts like a huge antenna and it radiates noise into everything around it.
How much current could a single CPU pin be handling?![]()
Originally posted by: PsYcHoCoW
according to p4 6xx datasheet, there are 226 Vcc pins and 273 Vss pins... Icc(max) is 119A for an extreme edition processor at 3.73GHz ; that means 525mA per Vcc pin, if the load is spread ideally... ( <a target=_blank class=ftalternatingbarlinklarge href="ftp://download.intel.com/design/Pentium4/datashts/30638203.pdf">ftp://download.intel.com/design/Pentium4/datashts/30638203.pdf</a> )
